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Hintergrund: Mit der im Jahr 2020 aktualisierten AWMF-Leitlinie zur Versorgung mit einem Cochleaimplantat (CI) wurde erstmals der gesamte Prozess einer CI-Versorgung definiert. In der vorliegenden Studie wurden die Machbarkeit und die Ergebnisse einer sehr frühen Rehabilitationsmaßnahme (Reha) untersucht.
Methodik: Es wurden 54 Patienten in die Interventionsgruppe (IG) eingeschlossen, bei der die Reha innerhalb von 14 (maximal 28) Tagen nach der Implantation eingeleitet wurde. In eine Kontrollgruppe (KG, n = 21) wurden Patienten mit deutlich längerer Wartezeit eingeschlossen. Neben dem Beginn und der Dauer der Reha wurde das mit CI erreichte Sprachverstehen zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten innerhalb von 12 Monaten erfasst. Zusätzlich wurde mit Fragebögen der Aufwand der Anpassung des CI-Prozessors und die Zufriedenheit der Patienten mit dem Ergebnis sowie dem Zeitpunkt des Beginns der Reha ermittelt.
Ergebnisse: Die Wartezeit zwischen Implantation und Beginn der Reha lag in der IG bei 14 Tagen und in der KG bei 106 Tagen (Mediane). Es konnten 92,6 % der Patienten der IG die Reha innerhalb von 14 Tagen antreten. Der Effekt der Reha lag in der IG bei 35 und in der KG bei 25 Prozentpunkten (Freiburger Einsilbertest). Nach 6 und 12 Monaten (M) CI-Nutzung zeigten beide Gruppen sowohl in der Testbedingung in Ruhe (IG/KG 6M: 70 %/70 %; 12M: 70 %/60 %, Freiburger Einsilbertest) als auch im Störgeräusch (IG/KG 6M: −1,1 dB SNR/–0,85 dB SNR; 12M: −0,65 dB SNR/+0,3 dB SNR, Oldenburger Satztest) vergleichbare Ergebnisse. Die mittels des Fragebogens Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (SSQ) erfassten Ergebnisse für die Einschätzung der Hörqualität zeigten nach 6 Monaten eine bessere Bewertung in der IG, die sich nach 12 Monaten an die Ergebnisse der KG anglich. Die IG war mit dem Zeitpunkt des Beginns der Reha deutlich zufriedener als die KG. Alle anderen aus Fragebögen ermittelten Daten zeigten keine Unterschiede zwischen den beiden Gruppen.
Schlussfolgerung: Der sehr frühe Beginn einer stationären Reha nach Cochleaimplantation ist erfolgreich umsetzbar. Die Reha konnte innerhalb von 7 Wochen nach der Implantation abgeschlossen werden. Der Vergleich der Ergebnisse der Tests des Sprachverstehens vor und nach der Reha zeigte eine deutliche Steigerung. Somit ist ein deutlicher Reha-Effekt nachweisbar. Die Aufnahme der CI-Rehabilitation in den Katalog der Anschlussheilbehandlungen ist somit wissenschaftlich begründet und damit dringend zu empfehlen.
Die E3-Ubiquitinligase TRIM25 ist in verschiedenen humanen Tumoren verstärkt exprimiert, was häufig mit einer schlechten Prognose der betroffenen Patienten sowie dem Auftreten von Therapieresistenzen korreliert. Unsere Arbeitsgruppe konnte TRIM25 zuvor als Caspase-2 und -7 mRNA-bindendes Protein und negativen Regulator beider Caspasen in humanen Kolonkarzinomzellen identifizieren. Ein transienter TRIM25 Knockdown führt in Abhängigkeit der erhöhten Expression der jeweiligen Caspasen zur Sensitivierung der Kolonkarzinomzellen gegenüber Chemotherapeutika-induzierter Apoptose. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war, die Übertragbarkeit dieser Erkenntnisse auf einen loss-of-function-Ansatz mit stabilen TRIM25 Knockdown Zellen zu überprüfen. Die stabilen Knockdown Zellen sollten der späteren Etablierung eines Xenograftmodells dienen. Da zahlreiche TRIM Proteine bekannterweise eine vielseitige Rolle bei der Regulation sowohl onkogener als auch tumorsuppressiver Prozesse einnehmen, wurde als weitere maßgebliche Fragestellung dieser Arbeit der Einfluss von TRIM25 auf wichtige tumorigene Eigenschaften wie Proliferation, Migration, Zellzyklus und Inflammation untersucht. TRIM25-abhängige Effekte auf das Migrationsver halten von RKO-Zellen wurden im in vitro-Wundheilungsassay mit stabilen TRIM25 Knock down Zellen analysiert. Aufgrund hoher interexperimenteller Unterschiede im Migrations verhalten derselben Zellklone konnte hinsichtlich einer TRIM25-abhängigen Regulation der Migration jedoch keine eindeutige Aussage getroffen werden. Dagegen belegten die gezeigten Proliferationsassays eine signifikant vermehrte Proliferation von RKO-Zellen nach stabilem TRIM25 Knockdown. Dies legt eine tumorsuppressive Rolle von TRIM25 nahe. Durch flusszytometrische Analysen stabiler TRIM25 Knockdown und Kontrollzellen zeigten hinge gen keinen konsistenten Einfluss von TRIM25 auf den Zellzyklus von RKO-Zellen. Eine Sensitivierung von Kolonkarzinomzellen gegenüber Chemotherapeutika-induzierter Apoptose konnte auch in stabilen TRIM25 Knockdown Zellen nachgewiesen werden, während die für transiente Ansätze bekannte, TRIM25 Knockdown-abhängige Hochregulation von Caspase 2 und -7 dagegen deutlich geringer ausgeprägt war. Dies lässt vermuten, dass die Tumorzellen einer Hochregulation Zelltod-induzierender Proteine bei einem konstitutiven TRIM25Knockdown gegenregulieren. Aufgrund der aber nach wie vor nachweisbaren Sensitivierung der TRIM25 Knockdown Zellen gegenüber Apoptose, können zusätzliche, bisher noch nicht bekannte Mechanismen postuliert werden, welche zur Sensitivierung dieser Zellen gegenüber Apoptose beitragen. Die daraus abgeleitete, TRIM25-abhängige Apoptosehemmung spricht für einen „Überlebensmechanismus“, welcher maßgeblich zur Chemotherapieresis tenz von Kolonkarzinomzellen beitragen kann. Hinsichtlich eines Einflusses von TRIM25 auf entzündliche Prozesse wurden RKO-Zellen mit klassischen Aktivatoren des NLRP3-Inflammasoms stimuliert und ausgewählte Marker mittels Western Blot-Analysen nachgewiesen. TRIM25 Knockdown-abhängig war eine verminderte Spaltung der Apoptosemarker Caspase-3, -7 und PARP-1 nachweisbar. Caspase-7 und PARP-1 spielen bekanntermaßen auch im Rahmen Inflammasom-induzierter Signalprozesse eine wichtige Rolle, während die Spaltung von Caspase-3 durch das NLRP3-Inflammasom induziert werden kann und v.a. für apoptotische oder pyroptotische Prozesse verantwortlich gemacht wird. Daher kann postuliert werden, dass der stabile TRIM25 Knockdown zur Hemmung von Inflammasom-induzierten Signalprozessen führt und darüber Kolonkarzinomzellen vor Apoptose/Pyroptose geschützt werden. Umgekehrt deutet dies auf eine Aktivierung von Inflammasom-vermittelten Signalprozessen durch TRIM25 hin.
Aufgrund der hohen Inzidenz und Mortalität, der schlechten Prognose und der Entwicklung von Therapieresistenzen besteht ein dringender Bedarf in der Entwicklung neuer, verbesserter Therapien des kolorektalen Karzinoms sowie der Resensibilisierung der Krebszellen gegenüber gängigen, bereits bestehenden Therapieoptionen. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte ein onkogener Einfluss von TRIM25 auf Kolonkarzinomzellen durch Hemmung Chemotherapeutika-induzierter Apoptose nachgewiesen werden, während eine mögliche tumorigene Rolle von TRIM25 durch zusätzliche Aktivierung Inflammasom-induzierter Signalprozesse weiterer Untersuchungen bedarf. Zusammenfassend kann TRIM25 als vielversprechender therapeutischer Angriffspunkt für die Entwicklung von sowohl neuen antientzündlichen als auch tumorsuppressiven Therapien betrachtet werden.
Background: Novel treatments are needed to control refractory status epilepticus (SE). This study aimed to assess the potential effectiveness of fenfluramine (FFA) as an acute treatment option for SE. We present a summary of clinical cases where oral FFA was used in SE.
Methods: A case of an adult patient with Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (LGS) who was treated with FFA due to refractory SE is presented in detail. To identify studies that evaluated the use of FFA in SE, we performed a systematic literature search.
Results: Four case reports on the acute treatment with FFA of SE in children and adults with Dravet syndrome (DS) and LGS were available. We report in detail a 30-year-old woman with LGS of structural etiology, who presented with generalized tonic and dialeptic seizures manifesting at high frequencies without a return to clinical baseline constituting the diagnosis of SE. Treatment with anti-seizure medications up to lacosamide 600 mg/d, brivaracetam 300 mg/d, valproate 1,600 mg/d, and various benzodiazepines did not resolve the SE. Due to ongoing refractory SE and following an unremarkable echocardiography, treatment was initiated with FFA, with an initial dose of 10 mg/d (0.22 mg/kg body weight [bw]) and fast up-titration to 26 mg/d (0.58 mg/kg bw) within 10 days. Subsequently, the patient experienced a resolution of SE within 4 days, accompanied by a notable improvement in clinical presentation and regaining her mobility, walking with the assistance of physiotherapists. In the three cases reported in the literature, DS patients with SE were treated with FFA, and a cessation of SE was observed within a few days. No treatment-emergent adverse events were observed during FFA treatment in any of the four cases.
Conclusions: Based on the reported cases, FFA might be a promising option for the acute treatment of SE in patients with DS and LGS. Observational data show a decreased SE frequency while on FFA, suggesting a potentially preventive role of FFA in these populations.
Key points
* We summarize four cases of refractory status epilepticus (SE) successfully treated with fenfluramine.
* Refractory SE resolved after 4–7 days on fenfluramine.
* Swift fenfluramine up-titration was well-tolerated during SE treatment.
* Treatment-emergent adverse events on fenfluramine were not observed.
* Fenfluramine might be a valuable acute treatment option for SE in Dravet and Lennox–Gastaut syndromes.
Wissenschaftsbasierte und verständliche Gesundheitsinformationen sind ein Kernelement der Evidenzbasierten Medizin und von Public Health. Ziel ist es, informierte Entscheidungen zu ermöglichen, die auf realistischen Einschätzungen von Gesundheitsrisiken sowie von Nutzen und Schaden möglicher Interventionen beruhen. In Deutschland wurden während der COVID-19-Pandemie die Standards für eine evidenzbasierte Risikokommunikation wenig beachtet. Häufig war die öffentliche Berichterstattung einseitig, unvollständig und missverständlich. Bedrohungsszenarien haben emotionalen Stress und unnötige Angst ausgelöst. Eine systematische und umfassende Aufarbeitung der Pandemiemaßnahmen ist auch in Deutschland dringlich geboten. Dabei müsste eine kritisch-konstruktive Analyse der medialen Risikokommunikation von Expert*innen, Politiker*innen und Medien ein zentrales Element der Aufarbeitung sein. Die Ergebnisse sollen helfen, aus der vergangenen Pandemie zu lernen, um für künftige Krisen besser vorbereitet zu sein.
Highlights
• It is important to distinguish acute provoked seizures due to autoimmune encephalitis from chronic unprovoked seizures due to autoimmune-associated epilepsy.
• Currently it is hardly possible in an individual AIE/ALE/RE patient to separate acute provoked seizures from chronic unprovoked seizures due to limitations in determining seizure outcomes, unclear time courses, potential causal interactions between both seizure origins, compartmentalized immune-inflammation, and a lack of licensed drugs to reliably resolve immune-inflammation in the brain parenchyma.
• This makes it hard to decide when to terminate ASMs and to counsel the individual patient regarding driving abilities and other behavioral restrictions and recommendations.
• Studies are urgently needed to define clinical and paraclinical biomarkers in a hypothesis-free, data-driven approach reliably predicting (or not) the development of AAE and the cognitive and behavioral outcome in the due course of an individual patient´s disease.
• These studies should be experimentally validated in suitable animal models.
Abstract
The current International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) definition and classification guidelines for the first time introduced the category of immune-mediated focal epilepsy in addition to structural, genetic, infectious, and metabolic aetiologies. Moreover, the ILAE Autoimmunity and Inflammation Taskforce recently provided a conceptual framework for the distinction between acute “provoked” seizures in the acute phase of autoimmune encephalitis from chronic “unprovoked” seizures due to autoimmune-associated epilepsy. The first category predominately applies to those autoimmune encephalitis patients with autoantibodies against cell surface neural antigens, in whom autoantibodies are assumed to exert a direct ictogenic effect without overt structural damage. These patients do not exhibit enduring predisposition to seizures after the “acute phase” encephalitis, and thus do not fulfil the definition of epilepsy. The second category applies to those autoimmune encephalitis patients with autoantibodies against intracellular neural antigens and Rasmussen's encephalitis, in whom T cells are assumed to cause epileptogenic effects through immune-inflammation and overt structural damage. These patients do exhibit enduring predisposition to seizures after the “acute phase” of encephalitis and thus fulfil the definition of epilepsy. AAE may result from both, ongoing brain autoimmunity and associated structural brain damage according to the current ILAE definition and classification guideline. We here discuss the shortcomings and defaults of this concept and suggest an unbiased translationally validated and data-driven approach to predict in an individual encephalitis patient the propensity to develop (or not) AAE and the cognitive and behavioural outcome.
Background: The Association of the Scientific Medical Societies in Germany (AWMF) clinical practice guideline on cochlear implant (CI) treatment, which was updated in 2020, defined the entire process of CI care for the first time. In the present study, the feasibility and results of very early rehabilitation were examined.
Materials and methods: The intervention group (IG) comprised 54 patients in whom rehabilitation was initiated within 14 (maximally 28) days after implantation. Patients with a significantly longer waiting time were included in the control group (CG, n = 21). In addition to the start and duration of rehabilitation, the speech intelligibility achieved with CI was recorded at different timepoints within a 12-month period. In addition, questionnaires were used to assess the effort of fitting the CI processor and the patients’ satisfaction with the outcome as well as the timing of the start of rehabilitation.
Results: Median waiting time between implantation and start of rehabilitation was 14 days in the IG and 106 days in the CG; 92.6% of IG patients were able to start rehabilitation within 14 days. The effect of rehabilitation in the IG was 35 and in the CG 25 percentage points (Freiburg monosyllabic test). After 6 and 12 months of CI use, both groups showed comparable results in the test condition in quiet (IG/CG 6 months: 70%/70%; 12 months: 70%/60%, Freiburg monosyllabic test) and in noise (IG/CG 6 months: −1.1 dB SNR/–0.85 dB SNR; 12 months: −0.65 dB SNR/+0.3 dB SNR, Oldenburg sentence test). Hearing quality assessment scores collected by SSQ (Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale) questionnaire showed better scores in the IG at 6 months, which converged to CG scores at 12 months. The IG was significantly more satisfied with the timing of the start of rehab than the CG. All other data obtained from questionnaires showed no differences between the two groups.
Conclusion: A very early start of inpatient rehabilitation after cochlear implantation was successfully implemented. The rehabilitation was completed within 7 weeks of CI surgery. Comparison of speech recognition test results before and after rehabilitation showed a significant improvement. A clear rehabilitation effect can therefore be demonstrated. Inclusion of CI rehabilitation in the German catalog of follow-up treatments is thus scientifically justified and therefore strongly recommended.
Background: Urachal cancer (UrC) is a rare disease with limited availability of representative incidence and clinical data. Although, the prevalence is accounting for less than 1% of bladder tumors, the 5-year survival rate is around only 50% for patients with resectable tumors, and even worse for patients with metastatic disease. Due to the lack of comprehensive prospective studies, our current knowledge of UrC is still limited.
Objective: The present study aimed to summarize the available registry-based studies with unselected UrC patients to evaluate its incidence and clinicopathological characteristics.
Material and methods: We conducted a systematic literature search of registry-based UrC publications on the 15th of May 2023 in 5 databases, which identified 4,748 publications. After duplicate removal and selection by 2 independent investigators, 6 publications proved to be appropriate for the final meta-analysis. Estimated incidence and clinicopathological parameters were extracted.
Results: Estimated incidence ranged between 0.022 and 0.060/ 100.000 person-years, with the highest occurrence in Japan and the lowest in Canada, while the random effect model calculated an overall incidence rate of 0.04 (95%CI: 0.03–0.05) 100.000 person-years. The median age at first diagnosis was 60 years (range: 58–64). The female to male ratio was 2:3. Lymph node or distant metastases were present in 9% and 14% of patients. The predominant tumour type was adenocarcinoma (86%) followed by urothelial carcinoma (12%) and squamous cell carcinoma (2%). The 5-year survival rate was 51.0% with 95%CI: 45.2–57.4.
Conclusions: Our study provides an up-to-date comparison of estimated incidence rates between 6 countries of 3 continents based on rigorously selected registry-based studies. The results suggest low incidence rates for UrC with considerable geographic differences. The present meta-analysis provides unbiased registry-based data on the incidence, clinicopathological parameters and survival of UrC.
Although, during the past decades, substantial advances emerged in identifying major local and systemic factors contributing to initiation and progression of osteoarthritis (OA), some neuroendocrine mechanisms are still not understood or even neglected when thinking about novel therapeutic options. One of which is the sympathetic nervous system that exhibits various OA-promoting effects in different tissues of the joint. Interestingly, the β2-adrenoceptor (AR) mediates the majority of these effects as demonstrated by several in vitro, in vivo as well as in clinical studies. This review article does not only summarize studies of the past two decades demonstrating that the β2-AR plays an OA-promoting role in different tissues of the joint but also aims to encourage the reader to think about next-level research to discover novel and innovative preventive and/or therapeutic strategies targeting the β2-AR in OA.
Spezialwissen für SCALE
(2024)
Volker Zickermann und Eric Helfrich sind bei der Exzellenzcluster-Initiative SCALE (Subcellular Architecture of Life) dabei und werden dort ihre Expertise einbringen. Das Spezialgebiet des einen ist ein Proteinkomplex in den Mitochondrien, den Kraftwerken der Zelle. Der andere sucht schwerpunktmäßig bisher unbekannte Naturstoffe, die die Basis für neue Antibiotika sein könnten.
Herzforschung meets KI
(2024)
Moderne Methoden der Künstlichen Intelligenz (KI) spielen in der Wissenschaft eine immer größere Rolle. Wie Forscher des Exzellenzclusters Cardio-Pulmonary Institute (CPI) KI in der Herzbildgebung nutzen, zeigte Professor Eike Nagel im Rahmen der Bürgeruniversität der Goethe-Universität. Er leitet das Institut für experimentelle und translationale kardiovaskuläre Bildgebung am Fachbereich Medizin und forscht an der Entwicklung verbesserter Behandlungsmöglichkeiten für Herz-Kreislauf-Erkrankungen. Mit dem Ziel, seine Forschung für alle Menschen zugänglich und verständlicher zu machen, lud Prof. Nagel interessierte Bürger*innen am 10. Mai in sein Institut ein.
• Mexican and German populations of L. sericata differ in their development times.
• Mexican L. sericata had a shorter development time at 20°C than German flies.
• At 30 °C, German L. sericata pupariated and eclosed earlier than the Mexican flies.
• Differences in study design make the comparison of developmental studies difficult.
Abstract
The cosmopolitan blow fly Lucilia sericata is often used in forensic case work for estimating the minimum postmortem interval (PMImin). For this, the age of immature specimens developing on the dead body is calculated by measuring the time taken to reach the sampled developmental stage at a given temperature. To test whether regional developmental data of L. sericata is valid on a global scale, the time taken to reach different developmental stages was compared between a population from Mexico and one from Germany at two different constant temperatures.
The German population of L. sericata was collected in Frankfurt/Main, while the Mexican population originated near Oaxaca de Juarez and was transported to Germany in the larval stage. Only the F1 generation was used to avoid adaption of the Mexican flies. Eggs were immediately placed at 20 °C and 30 °C. Five times 30 freshly eclosed larvae per replicate (n = 5) were then transferred to a cup of minced meat in separate containers. The larvae were checked every 8 h for migration, pupariation or emergence of adult flies. The time at which the first individual and 50 % of the specimens per container entered each of these stages, was recorded.
Significant differences in the time of development between the two populations were observed at both temperatures. At 20 °C, the first specimens of the Mexican population reached all developmental stages a little (< 1 day to < 2 days) earlier than the German L. sericata. At 30 °C, the Mexican flies also reached the post-feeding stage slightly earlier (0.2 days). However, at 30 °C, the German flies started pupariation significantly earlier (after 5 days) than the Mexican flies (6.9 days) and the adults from Germany also emerged earlier (10.5 days compared to 13.1 days). The same pattern was observed when looking at 50 % of the total number of specimens per container. A comparison with previously published developmental studies was difficult as the experimental design varied widely between studies. However, the results were within the range of most studies. Our study has shown that age estimation can vary widely depending on the population on which the reference data used for the calculations are based. This highlights the importance of using local and population-specific developmental data for estimating the age of blow flies in case work.
• Mexican and German populations of L. sericata differ in their development times.
• Mexican L. sericata had a shorter development time at 20°C than German flies.
• At 30 °C, German L. sericata pupariated and eclosed earlier than the Mexican flies.
• Differences in study design make the comparison of developmental studies difficult.
Abstract
The cosmopolitan blow fly Lucilia sericata is often used in forensic case work for estimating the minimum postmortem interval (PMImin). For this, the age of immature specimens developing on the dead body is calculated by measuring the time taken to reach the sampled developmental stage at a given temperature. To test whether regional developmental data of L. sericata is valid on a global scale, the time taken to reach different developmental stages was compared between a population from Mexico and one from Germany at two different constant temperatures.
The German population of L. sericata was collected in Frankfurt/Main, while the Mexican population originated near Oaxaca de Juarez and was transported to Germany in the larval stage. Only the F1 generation was used to avoid adaption of the Mexican flies. Eggs were immediately placed at 20 °C and 30 °C. Five times 30 freshly eclosed larvae per replicate (n = 5) were then transferred to a cup of minced meat in separate containers. The larvae were checked every 8 h for migration, pupariation or emergence of adult flies. The time at which the first individual and 50 % of the specimens per container entered each of these stages, was recorded.
Significant differences in the time of development between the two populations were observed at both temperatures. At 20 °C, the first specimens of the Mexican population reached all developmental stages a little (< 1 day to < 2 days) earlier than the German L. sericata. At 30 °C, the Mexican flies also reached the post-feeding stage slightly earlier (0.2 days). However, at 30 °C, the German flies started pupariation significantly earlier (after 5 days) than the Mexican flies (6.9 days) and the adults from Germany also emerged earlier (10.5 days compared to 13.1 days). The same pattern was observed when looking at 50 % of the total number of specimens per container. A comparison with previously published developmental studies was difficult as the experimental design varied widely between studies. However, the results were within the range of most studies. Our study has shown that age estimation can vary widely depending on the population on which the reference data used for the calculations are based. This highlights the importance of using local and population-specific developmental data for estimating the age of blow flies in case work.
Hematopoietic mutations in epigenetic regulators like DNA methyltransferase 3 alpha (DNMT3A), play a pivotal role in driving clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP), and are associated with unfavorable outcomes in patients suffering from heart failure (HF). However, the precise interactions between CHIP-mutated cells and other cardiac cell types remain unknown. Here, we identify fibroblasts as potential partners in interactions with CHIP-mutated monocytes. We used combined transcriptomic data derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of HF patients, both with and without CHIP, and cardiac tissue. We demonstrate that inactivation of DNMT3A in macrophages intensifies interactions with cardiac fibroblasts and increases cardiac fibrosis. DNMT3A inactivation amplifies the release of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor, thereby facilitating activation of cardiac fibroblasts. These findings identify a potential pathway of DNMT3A CHIP-driver mutations to the initiation and progression of HF and may also provide a compelling basis for the development of innovative anti-fibrotic strategies.
PET probes targeting fibroblasts are frequently used for varying applications in oncology. In recent years, the clinical spectrum has been expanded towards cardiovascular medicine, e.g., after myocardial infarction, in aortic stenosis or as a non-invasive read-out of atherosclerosis. We herein provide a brief overview of the current status of this PET radiotracer in the context of cardiovascular disease, including translational and clinical evidence. In addition, we will also briefly discuss future applications, e.g., the use of fibroblast-targeting PET to investigate bilateral organ function along the cardiorenal axis.
Background: Despite known clinical benefits, guideline-recommended heart rate (HR) control is not achieved for a significant proportion of patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction. The wearable cardioverter-defibrillator (WCD) provides continuous HR monitoring and alerts that could aid medication titration.
Objective: This study sought to evaluate sex differences in achieving guideline-recommended HR control during a period of WCD use.
Methods: Data from patients fitted with a WCD from 2015 to 2018 were obtained from the manufacturer’s database (ZOLL). The proportion of patients with adequate nighttime resting HR control at the beginning of use (BOU) and at the end of use (EOU) were compared by sex. Adequate HR control was defined as having a nighttime median HR <70 beats/min.
Results: A total of 21,440 women and a comparative sample of 17,328 men (median 90 [IQR 59–116] days of WCD wear) were included in the final dataset. Among patients who did not receive a shock, over half had insufficient HR control at BOU (59% of women, 53% of men). Although the proportion of patients with resting HR ≥70 beats/min improved by EOU, 43% of women and 36% of men did not achieve guideline-recommended HR control.
Conclusion: A significant proportion of women and men did not achieve adequate HR control during a period of medical therapy optimization. Compared with men, a greater proportion of women receiving WCD shocks had insufficiently controlled HR in the week preceding ventricular tachyarrhythmia/ventricular fibrillation and 43% of nonshocked women, compared with 36% of men, did not reach adequate HR control during the study period. The WCD can be utilized as a remote monitoring tool to record HR and inform adequate uptitration of beta-blockers, with particular focus on reducing the treatment gap in women.
Background: Dual-energy CT (DECT)-derived bone mineral density (BMD) of the distal radius and other CT-derived metrics related to bone health have been suggested for opportunistic osteoporosis screening and risk evaluation for sustaining distal radius fractures (DRFs).
Methods: The distal radius of patients who underwent DECT between 01/2016 and 08/2021 was retrospectively analyzed. Cortical Hounsfield Unit (HU), trabecular HU, cortical thickness, and DECT-based BMD were acquired from a non-fractured, metaphyseal area in all examinations. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was conducted to determine the area under the curve (AUC) values for predicting DRFs based on DECT-derived BMD, HU values, and cortical thickness. Logistic regression models were then employed to assess the associations of these parameters with the occurrence of DRFs.
Results: In this study, 263 patients (median age: 52 years; interquartile range: 36–64; 132 women; 192 fractures) were included. ROC curve analysis revealed a higher area under the curve (AUC) value for DECT-derived BMD compared to cortical HU, trabecular HU, and cortical thickness (0.91 vs. 0.61, 0.64, and 0.69, respectively; p <.001). Logistic regression models confirmed the association between lower DECT-derived BMD and the occurrence of DRFs (Odds Ratio, 0.83; p <.001); however, no influence was observed for cortical HU, trabecular HU, or cortical thickness.
Conclusions: DECT can be used to assess the BMD of the distal radius without dedicated equipment such as calibration phantoms to increase the detection rates of osteoporosis and stratify the individual risk to sustain DRFs. In contrast, assessing HU-based values and cortical thickness does not provide clinical benefit.
Key Teaching Points
• Wearables such as smartwatches can monitor beyond heart rate and heart rhythm.
• Specific smartwatches provide reliable measurements of electrocardiographic intervals (eg, QT interval).
• Correct analysis and interpretation of the QT interval in an individual with previously unknown long QT syndrome facilitated the diagnosis.
Highlights
• CD62p + exosomes were significantly increased in septic polytrauma-patients, while CD40+, as well as CD49e + exosomes were diminished.
• Exosomal IL-6 concentration in septic patients reflects the systemic IL-6.
• Exosomal IL-10 concentration seemed to be constant in patients and healthy controls.
• Decrease of miR-21 in exosomes was associated with the development of sepsis, while exosomal miR-93, miR-155 and miR-92a were not specifically altered.
Abstract
Sepsis as a severe systemic inflammation leads oftentimes to organ dysfunction and subsequently to death. In polytrauma patients, septic complications represent with 45% the predominant cause of late death and are responsible for extremely high costs in the healthcare system. Therefore, clinicians have to detect as early as possible the begin of sepsis to improve the patient's outcome. One new promising diagnostic tool to diagnose septic complications in polytraumatized patients are exosomes.
Plasma samples from polytraumatized patients (Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≥16) which developed sepsis (n = 10) and without sepsis (n = 10), were collected at emergency room (ER), 24h and 5 days after trauma. The EVs subpopulations were investigated by a bead-based multiplex flow cytometry measurement of surface epitopes and were compared with plasma EVs from healthy controls (n = 10). Moreover, exosomal cytokine concentrations were measured via high-sensitive ELISA and were correlated with systemic concentrations. For miRNA cargo analysis, we analysed the miRNAs miR-1298-5p, miR-1262, miR-125b-5p, miR-92a-3p, miR-93-5p, miR-155-5p and miR-21-5p and compared their exosomal concentrations by means of RT-qPCR.
CD62p + exosomes were significantly increased in septic polytrauma-patients (p ≤ 0.05), while CD40+exosomes, as well as CD49e + exosomes were diminished (p ≤ 0.05). Furthermore, we observed that the exosomal IL-6 concentration reflects the systemic IL-6 concentration (r2 = 0.63) and did not significantly alter between patients with and without sepsis. The exosomal IL-10 concentration seemed to be constant in all patients and healthy controls. We observed that a decrease of miR-21-5p in exosomes was associated with the development of sepsis (p ≤ 0.05), while exosomal miR-93-5p, miR-155-5p and miR-92a-3p were not specifically altered in septic patients.
Taken together, the present study in polytraumatized patients demonstrated that the development of sepsis is associated with an increase of CD62p + exosomes. Furthermore, the exosomal cargo was changed in septic patients: miR-21-5p was diminished.
Lifestyle factors—such as diet, physical activity (PA), smoking, and alcohol consumption—have a significant impact on mortality as well as healthcare costs. Moreover, they play a crucial role in the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2). There also seems to be a link between lifestyle behaviours and insulin resistance, which is often a precursor of DM2. This study uses an enhanced Healthy Living Index (HLI) integrating accelerometric data and an Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) to explore differences in lifestyle between insulin-sensitive (IS) and insulin-resistant (IR) individuals. Moreover, it explores the association between lifestyle behaviours and inflammation. Analysing data from 99 participants of the mPRIME study (57 women and 42 men; mean age 49.8 years), we calculated HLI scores—ranging from 0 to 4— based on adherence to specific low-risk lifestyle behaviours, including non-smoking, adhering to a healthy diet, maximally moderate alcohol consumption, and meeting World Health Organization (WHO) PA guidelines. Insulin sensitivity was assessed using a Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were used as a proxy for inflammation. Lifestyle behaviours, represented by HLI scores, were significantly different between IS and IR individuals (U = 1529.0; p = 0.023). The difference in the HLI score between IR and IS individuals was mainly driven by lower adherence to PA recommendations in the IR group. Moreover, reduced PA was linked to increased CRP levels in the IR group (r = −0.368, p = 0.014). Our findings suggest that enhancing PA, especially among individuals with impaired insulin resistance, holds significant promise as a preventive strategy.
Highlights
• Constrictional structures range from dome-and-basin folds to coeval folds and boudins.
• Under bulk constriction, the competent layer rotates slower than a passive plane.
• Extension-parallel and –perpendicular folds grow simultaneously.
• Extension-perpendicular folds affect previous boudins.
Abstract
We conducted scaled analogue modelling to show the influence of varying single layer initial orientation on the geometry of folds and boudins in a bulk constrictional strain field. The initial angle between the plane of shortening and the competent layer (θZ(i)) was incrementally increased from 0° to 90° by multiples of 11.25°. While the amount of layer thickening decreased with increasing θZ(i), the deformation structures produced range from pure dome-and-basin folds to coeval folds and boudins. Based on the attitude of fold axes, there are extension-parallel (FEPR) and extension-perpendicular (FEPP) folds, with axes subparallel and subperpendicular to the principal stretching axis (X), respectively. Coeval growth of FEPR folds and boudins occurred when θZ(i) > ca. 25°. The FEPP folds can be subdivided into a first type which affect the entire layer (if θZ(i) ranges between 11.25 and 78.75°) and a second type, referred to as FBEPP folds, which are affecting pre-existing boudins if θZ(i) > 45°. The interlimb angle of all types of folds increases with increasing θZ(i). Folds and boudins similar to the ones produced in this study can be found in salt domes and in tectonites of subduction zones.
Highlights
• Out of the six edible pumpkin seeds found in Cameroonian C. sativus showed most potent anti-proliferative effects on prostate cells.
• Its oil conserved almost all the effects of raw seeds and prevented benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).
• It exhibited potent anti-inflammatory activities in rat with BPH.
Abstract
Pumpkin seeds are claimed to treat prostate tumour/cancer. The in vitro (ability to inhibit cell growth through MTT assay) and in vivo (ability to prevent testosterone-induced BPH in rats at the doses of 125, 250, 500 and 1000 mg/kg BW) of six edible pumpkin seeds found in Cameroonian were assessed. The endpoints were cell growth arrest, prostate mass and volume, prostatic epithelium height, prostatic proteins, prostate specific antigen (PSA) and inflammatory cytokines. In vitro, C. sativus seeds exhibited the most potent antiproliferative effects on DU145 and PC3 prostate cancer cells and its oil conserved almost all the effects of raw seeds. Further, it prevented the increased of prostate relative mass and volume, prostate epithelium height, PSA and testosterone dose-dependently compared to normal rats. This effect is thought to be mediated through antiandrogenic, estrogenic and anti-inflammatory activities, evidenced by a decreased in IL-1β, IL-6 and TNFα level. Overall, this results justify its traditional use.
Einleitung: Die Zentrale Notaufnahme (ZNA) stellt eine Schnittstelle zwischen prä- und innerklinischer Versorgung dar. Das Spektrum der Krankheitsbilder erstreckt sich über jegliche Fachrichtungen und variiert von harmlosen Banalitäten bis zu akuten Notfällen. Eine sichere und suffiziente Primärversorgung ist die Basis eines qualitativ-hochwertigen Gesundheitssystems.2 Verspätete oder falsche Diagnosen in der ZNA sind mit 10-30 % keine Seltenheit.
Dies ist nicht nur für den individuellen Patienten belastend, es bedeutet auch einen zusätzlichen Ressourcenverbrauch und eine finanzielle Belastung für das Gesundheitssystem. Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) haben das Potenzial, sowohl professionelle Anwender als auch Laien bei ihrer Diagnosefindung zu unterstützen. Fragestellung: Ziel der Arbeit ist es herauszufinden, welchen Einfluss der Diagnosezeitpunkt auf das Outcome von Patienten mit Abdominalschmerzen in der ZNA hat und inwiefern ein CDSS das Potenzial hat, die genannten Punkte zu beeinflussen.
Methoden: Es handelte sich um eine prospektive, doppelt verblindete Beobachtungsstudie. Patienten, die sich mit Abdominalschmerzen in der Notaufnahme vorstellten, gaben ihre Symptome in die Ada-App ein. Sowohl die Diagnosevorschläge der App als auch die Verdachtsdiagnosen des behandelnden Arztes wurden dokumentiert und verglichen. Weitere erhobene Parameter waren die Verwendung von apparativer Diagnostik, die vergangene Zeit bis zur endgültigen Diagnosestellung, das Auftreten von Komplikationen, die Komorbidität und Mortalität sowie die Länge des Krankenhausaufenthalts. Das Follow-Up erfolgte zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten bis zu Tag 90. Für die Analyse wurden die 450 Patienten anhand des Zeitpunkts ihrer Diagnosestellung in Gruppen "früh" (Tag 0) und "spät" (Tag 1-24) eingeteilt.
Ergebnisse: Im Vergleich zur „frühen“ Gruppe, hatte die Gruppe der „spät“ diagnostizierten Patienten einen höheren Anteil von Männern (45.2% (n=168/372) versus 60.3 % (n=47/78); p=0.018), im Schnitt einen höheren Charlson Comorbidity Index (0.7 versus 1.1; p=0.045) und im Schnitt einen höheren RAI-C Score (8.06 versus 9.9; p<0.001) am Tag ihrer Vorstellung. Bei den „spät“ diagnostizierten blieben weniger Patienten komplikationsfrei (57.0 % 49 (n=212/372) versus 17.9% (n=14/78); p<0.001), es traten mehr Major-Komplikationen auf (8.9% (n=33/372) versus 17.9% (n=14/78); p=0.024), analog dazu war der Comprehensive Complication Index höher (13.1 versus 25.6; p<0.001) und sie verweilten länger im Krankenhaus (2.6 Tage versus 6.7 Tage; p<0.001). Zudem nahmen sie signifikant mehr apparative Diagnostik in Anspruch.
Die behandelnden Ärzte konnten in 82.6% der Fälle (n=372/450) am Tag der Vorstellung die korrekte Diagnose stellen. Die Ada-App konnte in insgesamt 52% der Fälle (n=234/450) die korrekte Diagnose unter ihren Diagnoseverschlägen nennen.
Schlussfolgerung: Multimorbide Patienten scheinen anfälliger zu sein für falsche und verspätete Diagnosen. Ein später Diagnosezeitpunkt korreliert mit der vermehrten Nutzung apparativer Diagnostik, einem komplikationsreicheren Verlauf, einer höheren Komorbidität und einem längeren Krankenhausaufenthalt.
Die Ada-App ist den Ärzten zwar unterlegen, dennoch ist Potenzial vorhanden.
Für Ärzte kann die Ada-App eine Unterstützung im Rahmen der Diagnosefindung darstellen. Neben der Ressourcenentlastung kann sie vor Fehlannahmen und frühzeitigen Schlussfolgerungen schützen und auf weitere mögliche Differentialdiagnosen hinweisen. Die Ada-App stellt für Laien mit Sicherheit eine Weiterentwicklung gegenüber der simplen Symptomsuche über das Internet dar, dennoch sollten weitere Studien den Nutzen und die Sicherheit der App überprüfen.
Purpose: The IC-8® Apthera™ (AcuFocus Inc.™, Irvine, California, USA) is the first small aperture intraocular lens (IOL) to receive FDA approval for presbyopia correction in the summer of 2022. It is a single-piece hydrophobic acrylic monofocal lens, which is placed in the capsular bag. In its center it carries a black circular mask (FilterRing™) with a diameter of 3.23 mm consisting of polyvinylidene fluoride and carbon black nanoparticles. In the center of this mask sits a 1.36 mm wide aperture. Thanks to this pinhole effect the IC-8® serves as an extended-depth-of-focus (EDOF) IOL and can be used in presbyopia correction.
This report describes the case of a patient with an IC-8® implant who underwent Nd:YAG laser capsulotomy for posterior capsule opacification (PCO). The post laser checkup showed a dark central optical change within the IOL and the patient described optical phenomena as well as blurred central vision, which is why he received IOL exchange. The explanted IC-8® was sent to the Intermountain Ocular Research Center at the University of Utah for further analysis.
Observations: A 56-year-old male underwent cataract surgery with implantation of a non-diffractive EDOF-IOL on the right and the IC-8® small aperture IOL on the left eye. On the left eye, the patient had received penetrating keratoplasty seven years prior to the cataract operation due to posttraumatic corneal scarring. The early checkups after cataract surgery showed a corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) in the left eye of +0.1 logMAR in the first month. About 5 months after the operation, PCO was first described on the left eye leading to a decrease in visual acuity to +0.4 logMAR (CDVA). Due to PCO, Nd:YAG laser capsulotomy was conducted 5 months after the cataract operation on the left eye. 12 shots were applied at 2.7 mJ. The following appointments showed a continuously reduced visual acuity of +1.3 logMAR (uncorrected) on the left eye and the patient described blurry and ‘swirled’ central vision. By slightly tilting his head and thus not using the center of his optic axis, he would be able to see sharper. Slit lamp examination showed a small optical change inside the IC-8® IOL not resembling a pit but believed to be a small pocket of air. Due to the ongoing symptoms as well as the reduced VA, the seemingly damaged small aperture IOL was exchanged for a three-piece hydrophobic acrylic monofocal lens, which was also placed in the posterior chamber. The explanted IC-8® was sent to the Intermountain Ocular Research Center at the University of Utah for further analysis. Results from gross and light microscopic analysis showed that the change caused by the Nd:YAG laser application consisted of a localized optical area containing carbon black nanoparticles used for the circular mask within the IOL.
Conclusions and importance: When dealing with PCO and performing Nd:YAG laser capsulotomy in eyes with an IC-8® IOL implant, the laser shots should be applied either inside the aperture or outside of the black circular mask of the IOL. Otherwise, the Nd:YAG laser can lead to bursts of carbon nanoparticles within the IOL which may cause optical phenomena as well as decreased visual acuity possibly resulting in an IOL exchange.
Highlights
• Deletion of SPPL3 promotes resistance of malignant B cells to NK cell cytotoxicity
• Loss of SPPL3 blocks ligand binding to NK receptors via increased N-glycosylation
• B3GNT2 deletion reduces LacNAc addition and restores SPPL3-KO cell sensitivity to NK cells
• SPPL3-deficient cells are enriched in tetra-antennary N-glycans with LacNAc elongations
Summary
Natural killer (NK) cells are primary defenders against cancer precursors, but cancer cells can persist by evading immune surveillance. To investigate the genetic mechanisms underlying this evasion, we perform a genome-wide CRISPR screen using B lymphoblastoid cells. SPPL3, a peptidase that cleaves glycosyltransferases in the Golgi, emerges as a top hit facilitating evasion from NK cytotoxicity. SPPL3-deleted cells accumulate glycosyltransferases and complex N-glycans, disrupting not only binding of ligands to NK receptors but also binding of rituximab, a CD20 antibody approved for treating B cell cancers. Notably, inhibiting N-glycan maturation restores receptor binding and sensitivity to NK cells. A secondary CRISPR screen in SPPL3-deficient cells identifies B3GNT2, a transferase-mediating poly-LacNAc extension, as crucial for resistance. Mass spectrometry confirms enrichment of N-glycans bearing poly-LacNAc upon SPPL3 loss. Collectively, our study shows the essential role of SPPL3 and poly-LacNAc in cancer immune evasion, suggesting a promising target for cancer treatment.
Highlights
• Piriform cortex and amgydala can be separated based on their distinct structural connectivity.
• Similar to histological findings, the connectivity of the piriform cortex suggests posterior frontal and temporal subregions.
• Subregions of the piriform cortex have distinct connectivity profiles.
• Anterior PC extended into ventrotemporal PC posteriorly, which has not been described before, requiring further investigation.
• All parcellations were made publicly available.
Abstract
The anatomy of the human piriform cortex (PC) is poorly understood. We used a bimodal connectivity-based-parcellation approach to investigate subregions of the PC and its connectional differentiation from the amygdala.
One hundred (55 % female) genetically unrelated subjects from the Human Connectome Project were included. A region of interest (ROI) was delineated bilaterally covering PC and amygdala, and functional and structural connectivity of this ROI with the whole gray matter was computed. Spectral clustering was performed to obtain bilateral parcellations at granularities of k = 2–10 clusters and combined bimodal parcellations were computed. Validity of parcellations was assessed via their mean individual-to-group similarity per adjusted rand index (ARI).
Individual-to-group similarity was higher than chance in both modalities and in all clustering solutions. The amygdala was clearly distinguished from PC in structural parcellations, and olfactory amygdala was connectionally more similar to amygdala than to PC. At higher granularities, an anterior and ventrotemporal and a posterior frontal cluster emerged within PC, as well as an additional temporal cluster at their boundary. Functional parcellations also showed a frontal piriform cluster, and similar temporal clusters were observed with less consistency. Results from bimodal parcellations were similar to the structural parcellations. Consistent results were obtained in a validation cohort.
Distinction of the human PC from the amygdala, including its olfactory subregions, is possible based on its structural connectivity alone. The canonical fronto-temporal boundary within PC was reproduced in both modalities and with consistency. All obtained parcellations are freely available.
Background: Trauma-related guilt and shame are crucial for the development and maintenance of PTSD (posttraumatic stress disorder). We developed an intervention combining cognitive techniques with loving-kindness meditations (C-METTA) that specifically target these emotions. C-METTA is an intervention of six weekly individual treatment sessions followed by a four-week practice phase.
Objective: This study examined C-METTA in a proof-of-concept study within a randomized wait-list controlled trial.
Method: We randomly assigned 32 trauma-exposed patients with a DSM-5 diagnosis to C-METTA or a wait-list condition (WL). Primary outcomes were clinician-rated PTSD symptoms (CAPS-5) and trauma-related guilt and shame. Secondary outcomes included psychopathology, self-criticism, well-being, and self-compassion. Outcomes were assessed before the intervention phase and after the practice phase.
Results: Mixed-design analyses showed greater reductions in C-METTA versus WL in clinician-rated PTSD symptoms (d = −1.09), guilt (d = −2.85), shame (d = −2.14), psychopathology and self-criticism.
Conclusion: Our findings support positive outcomes of C-METTA and might contribute to improved care for patients with stress-related disorders. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00023470).
HIGHLIGHTS
C-METTA is an intervention that addresses trauma-related guilt and shame and combines cognitive interventions with loving-kindness meditations.
A proof-of-concept study was conducted examining C-METTA in a wait-list randomized controlled trial
C-METTA led to reductions in trauma-related guilt and shame and PTSD symptoms.
Diese Arbeit hatte das Ziel, die Größe einer DVT-Aufnahme (FOV) mit der Größe der durch die Indikationsstellung definierten Region (ROI) zu vergleichen. Durch eine speziell dafür entwickelte Software sollten Messungen in den Datensätzen ermöglicht werden. Die dazu verwendeten 332 Datensätze wurden zufallsverteilt aus den mit einem Orthophos SL-3D DVT-Gerät der Firma Dentsply Sirona in der Poliklinik für zahnärztliche Chirurgie und Implantologie des ZZMK (Carolinum) in Frankfurt angefertigten Röntgenaufnahmen selektiert.
Es wurde die Auswertungssoftware ExRoi entwickelt, mit der die Werte des axialen Durchmessers, die Höhe (vertikale Dimension) sowie die Distanz der Mittelpunkte von FOV und ROI direkt in den Datensätzen bestimmt werden konnten. Zusätzlich wurde festgehalten, welche rechtfertigenden Indikationen gestellt und welche Auflösungsmodi verwendet wurden.
Die Stichprobe bestand aus Aufnahmen mit einem axialen Durchmesser von 8 cm [VOL 1] (n= 76, entsprechend 46,39%), 5 cm Durchmesser [VOL 2] (n = 102, entsprechend 30,72%) und 11 cm Durchmesser [VOL 3] (n= 154, entsprechend 22,89%). 95,18% der Aufnahmen wurden im HD-Modus mit laut Herstellerangaben vier Mal so vielen Aufnahmen im Vergleich zum SD-Modus angefertigt. Hauptindikationen waren Implantat Planung (45,1%) und Planungen komplizierter Zahn-Extraktionen (25,5%).
Die Messungen zum Vergleich des axialen Durchmessers zeigten, dass bei Verwendung des VOL 2 die ROI im Mittel den größten Anteil der FOV nutzt (78,52 %), den kleinsten Anteil nutzt durchschnittlich VOL 1 (56,04 %). Dazwischen liegt VOL 3 (69,12 %). In der Vertikalen nutzt die ROI von VOL 3 mittelwertig den größten Anteil der FOV (81,87 %), den kleinsten Mittelwert hat VOL 1 (58,76 %). VOL 2 liegt zwischen diesen Werten (64,47 %).
In allen Fällen war das FOV größer als die ROI und die ROI lag im Bereich des gewählten FOV.
Die Mittelpunkte von FOV und ROI lagen im Mittel in der axialen Ebene in Abhängigkeit vom gewählten Volumen um rund 9-13 mm auseinander, in der coronalen und sagittalen Ebene um rund 5-6mm.
Aus diesen Ergebnissen kann für das verwendete Gerät eine gute Trefferquote für die ROI abgeleitet werden. Höhe und Durchmesser des FOV hätten in den meisten Fällen kleiner gewählt werden können, liegen aber angesichts der vorhandenen Auswahl-Optionen des Röntgengeräts zur Dimensionierung der Volumina in einem akzeptablen Bereich.
Targeted protein degradation (TPD) has recently emerged as an exciting new drug modality. However, the strategy of developing small molecule-based protein degraders has evolved over the past two decades and has now established molecular tags that are already in clinical use, as well as chimeric molecules, PROteolysis TArgeting Chimeras (PROTACs), based mainly on ligand systems developed for the two E3 ligases CRBN and VHL. The large size of the human E3 ligase family suggests that PROTACs can be developed by targeting a large diversity of E3 ligases, some of which have restricted expression patterns with the potential to design disease- or tissue-specific degraders. Indeed, many new E3 ligands have been published recently, confirming the druggability of E3 ligases. This review summarises recent data on E3 ligases and highlights the challenges in developing these molecules into efficient PROTACs rivalling the established degrader systems.
We conducted a systematic review investigating the efficacy and tolerability of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosteroids in children with epilepsies other than infantile epileptic spasm syndrome (IESS) that are resistant to anti-seizure medication (ASM). We included retrospective and prospective studies reporting on more than five patients and with clear case definitions and descriptions of treatment and outcome measures. We searched multiple databases and registries, and we assessed the risk of bias in the selected studies using a questionnaire based on published templates. Results were summarized with meta-analyses that pooled logit-transformed proportions or rates. Subgroup analyses and univariable and multivariable meta-regressions were performed to examine the influence of covariates. We included 38 studies (2 controlled and 5 uncontrolled prospective; 31 retrospective) involving 1152 patients. Meta-analysis of aggregate data for the primary outcomes of seizure response and reduction of electroencephalography (EEG) spikes at the end of treatment yielded pooled proportions (PPs) of 0.60 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.52–0.67) and 0.56 (95% CI 0.43–0.68). The relapse rate was high (PP 0.33, 95% CI 0.27–0.40). Group analyses and meta-regression showed a small benefit of ACTH and no difference between all other corticosteroids, a slightly better effect in electric status epilepticus in slow sleep (ESES) and a weaker effect in patients with cognitive impairment and “symptomatic” etiology. Obesity and Cushing's syndrome were the most common adverse effects, occurring more frequently in trials addressing continuous ACTH (PP 0.73, 95% CI 0.48–0.89) or corticosteroids (PP 0.72, 95% CI 0.54–0.85) than intermittent intravenous or oral corticosteroid administration (PP 0.05, 95% CI 0.02–0.10). The validity of these results is limited by the high risk of bias in most included studies and large heterogeneity among study results. This report was registered under International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) number CRD42022313846. We received no financial support.
Key points
* Systematic review resulting in low to moderately solid evidence on the efficacy and tolerability of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosteroid treatment in children with epilepsy other than infantile spasms.
* Meta-analysis based on aggregate data from 2 controlled prospective, 5 uncontrolled prospective, and 31 retrospective studies.
* Pooled data showing a seizure response in 60% and electroencephalography (EEG) response in 56% of patients, with no major differences between drugs. However, 30%–40% of patients relapse after the cessation of treatment.
* The most frequent adverse effects are obesity and Cushing's syndrome, occurring in 70% of patients under continuous treatment for some weeks, but in less than 10% undergoing pulsed, intermittent regimens.
* More prospective, randomized-controlled studies are needed to improve the level of evidence and define the optimal doses and treatment duration.
Highlights
• NCoR1 is the most highly expressed endothelial corepressor.
• Loss of NCoR1 promotes angiogenic function in endothelial cells.
• Loss of NCoR1 promotes a tip cell position during angiogenic sprouting.
Abstract
Corepressors negatively regulate gene expression by chromatin compaction. Targeted regulation of gene expression could provide a means to control endothelial cell phenotype. We hypothesize that by targeting corepressor proteins, endothelial angiogenic function can be improved. To study this, the expression and function of nuclear corepressors in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and in murine organ culture was studied. RNA-seq revealed that nuclear receptor corepressor 1 (NCoR1), silencing mediator of retinoid and thyroid hormone receptors (SMRT) and repressor element-1 silencing transcription factor (REST) are the highest expressed corepressors in HUVECs. Knockout and knockdown strategies demonstrated that the depletion of NCoR1 increased the angiogenic capacity of endothelial cells, whereas depletion of SMRT or REST did not. Interestingly, the effect was VEGF signaling independent. NCoR1 depletion significantly upregulated angiogenesis-associated genes, especially tip cell genes, including ESM1, DLL4 and NOTCH4, as observed by RNA- and ATAC-seq. Confrontation assays comparing cells with and without NCoR1-deficiency revealed that loss of NCoR1 promotes a tip-cell position during spheroid sprouting. Moreover, a proximity ligation assay identified NCoR1 as a direct binding partner of the Notch-signaling-related transcription factor RBPJk. Luciferase assays showed that siRNA-mediated knockdown of NCOR1 promotes RBPJk activity. Furthermore, NCoR1 depletion prompts upregulation of several elements in the Notch signaling cascade. Downregulation of NOTCH4, but not NOTCH1, prevented the positive effect of NCOR1 knockdown on spheroid outgrowth. Collectively, these data indicate that decreasing NCOR1 expression is an attractive approach to promote angiogenic function.
Viruses that carry a positive-sense, single-stranded (+ssRNA) RNA translate their genomes soon after entering the host cell to produce viral proteins, with the exception of retroviruses. A distinguishing feature of retroviruses is reverse transcription, where the +ssRNA genome serves as a template to synthesize a double-stranded DNA copy that subsequently integrates into the host genome. As retroviral RNAs are produced by the host cell transcriptional machinery and are largely indistinguishable from cellular mRNAs, we investigated the potential of incoming retroviral genomes to directly express proteins. Here we show through multiple, complementary methods that retroviral genomes are translated after entry. Our findings challenge the notion that retroviruses require reverse transcription to produce viral proteins. Synthesis of retroviral proteins in the absence of productive infection has significant implications for basic retrovirology, immune responses and gene therapy applications.
Highlights
• Reduced evoked theta activity in the deaf.
• Reduced theta-gamma and alpha-gamma cross-frequency couplings in the deaf.
• Stronger delta-alpha coupling in the deaf.
Abstract
Neurons within a neuronal network can be grouped by bottom-up and top-down influences using synchrony in neuronal oscillations. This creates the representation of perceptual objects from sensory features. Oscillatory activity can be differentiated into stimulus-phase-locked (evoked) and non-phase-locked (induced). The former is mainly determined by sensory input, the latter by higher-level (cortical) processing. Effects of auditory deprivation on cortical oscillations have been studied in congenitally deaf cats (CDCs) using cochlear implant (CI) stimulation. CI-induced alpha, beta, and gamma activity were compromised in the auditory cortex of CDCs. Furthermore, top-down information flow between secondary and primary auditory areas in hearing cats, conveyed by induced alpha oscillations, was lost in CDCs. Here we used the matching pursuit algorithm to assess components of such oscillatory activity in local field potentials recorded in primary field A1. Additionally to the loss of induced alpha oscillations, we also found a loss of evoked theta activity in CDCs. The loss of theta and alpha activity in CDCs can be directly related to reduced high-frequency (gamma-band) activity due to cross-frequency coupling. Here we quantified such cross-frequency coupling in adult 1) hearing-experienced, acoustically stimulated cats (aHCs), 2) hearing-experienced cats following acute pharmacological deafening and subsequent CIs, thus in electrically stimulated cats (eHCs), and 3) electrically stimulated CDCs. We found significant cross-frequency coupling in all animal groups in > 70% of auditory-responsive sites. The predominant coupling in aHCs and eHCs was between theta/alpha phase and gamma power. In CDCs such coupling was lost and replaced by alpha oscillations coupling to delta/theta phase. Thus, alpha/theta oscillations synchronize high-frequency gamma activity only in hearing-experienced cats. The absence of induced alpha and theta oscillations contributes to the loss of induced gamma power in CDCs, thereby signifying impaired local network activity.
Tight control over transcription factor activity is necessary for a sensible balance between cellular proliferation and differentiation in the embryo and during tissue homeostasis by adult stem cells, but mechanistic details have remained incomplete. The homeodomain transcription factor MEIS2 is an important regulator of neurogenesis in the ventricular–subventricular zone (V-SVZ) adult stem cell niche in mice. We here identify MEIS2 as direct target of the intracellular protease calpain-2 (composed of the catalytic subunit CAPN2 and the regulatory subunit CAPNS1). Phosphorylation at conserved serine and/or threonine residues, or dimerization with PBX1, reduced the sensitivity of MEIS2 towards cleavage by calpain-2. In the adult V-SVZ, calpain-2 activity is high in stem and progenitor cells, but rapidly declines during neuronal differentiation, which is accompanied by increased stability of MEIS2 full-length protein. In accordance with this, blocking calpain-2 activity in stem and progenitor cells, or overexpression of a cleavage-insensitive form of MEIS2, increased the production of neurons, whereas overexpression of a catalytically active CAPN2 reduced it. Collectively, our results support a key role for calpain-2 in controlling the output of adult V-SVZ neural stem and progenitor cells through cleavage of the neuronal fate determinant MEIS2.
Highligthts
• Marburg virus infects and replicates in primary human proximal tubular cells (PTC).
• Transcriptome analyses at multiple time points revealed a profound inflammatory response by IFNα, -y and TNFα signaling.
• Among the strongly downregulated gene sets were targets of the transcription factors MYC and E2F, the G2M checkpoint, as well as oxidative phosphorylation.
• Importantly, the downregulated factors comprise PGC-1α, a key factor in mitochondrial biogenesis and renal energy homeostasis, to be substantially downregulated in MARV-infected PTC.
• Our results suggest inflammation-induced changes in tubular energy metabolism as a possible factor in MARV-associated tubular dysfunction.
Abstract
Marburg virus, a member of the Filoviridae, is the causative agent of Marburg virus disease (MVD), a hemorrhagic fever with a case fatality rate of up to 90 %. Acute kidney injury is common in MVD and is associated with increased mortality, but its pathogenesis in MVD remains poorly understood. Interestingly, autopsies show the presence of viral proteins in different parts of the nephron, particularly in proximal tubular cells (PTC). These findings suggest a potential role for the virus in the development of MVD-related kidney injury. To shed light on this effect, we infected primary human PTC with Lake Victoria Marburg virus and conducted transcriptomic analysis at multiple time points. Unexpectedly, infection did not induce marked cytopathic effects in primary tubular cells at 20 and 40 h post infection. However, gene expression analysis revealed robust renal viral replication and dysregulation of genes essential for different cellular functions. The gene sets mainly downregulated in PTC were associated with the targets of the transcription factors MYC and E2F, DNA repair, the G2M checkpoint, as well as oxidative phosphorylation. Importantly, the downregulated factors comprise PGC-1α, a well-known factor in acute and chronic kidney injury. By contrast, the most highly upregulated gene sets were those related to the inflammatory response and cholesterol homeostasis. In conclusion, Marburg virus infects and replicates in human primary PTC and induces downregulation of processes known to be relevant for acute kidney injury as well as a strong inflammatory response.
Highlights:
• Assessment of body composition parameters in a large cohort of patients with HCC undergoing TACE.
• Fully automated artificial intelligence-based quantitative 3D volumetry of abdominal cavity tissue composition.
• Skeletal muscle volume and related parameters were independent prognostic factors in patients with HCC undergoing TACE.
Background & Aims: Body composition assessment (BCA) parameters have recently been identified as relevant prognostic factors for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Herein, we aimed to investigate the role of BCA parameters for prognosis prediction in patients with HCC undergoing transarterial chemoembolization (TACE).
Methods: This retrospective multicenter study included a total of 754 treatment-naïve patients with HCC who underwent TACE at six tertiary care centers between 2010–2020. Fully automated artificial intelligence-based quantitative 3D volumetry of abdominal cavity tissue composition was performed to assess skeletal muscle volume (SM), total adipose tissue (TAT), intra- and intermuscular adipose tissue, visceral adipose tissue, and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) on pre-intervention computed tomography scans. BCA parameters were normalized to the slice number of the abdominal cavity. We assessed the influence of BCA parameters on median overall survival and performed multivariate analysis including established estimates of survival.
Results: Univariate survival analysis revealed that impaired median overall survival was predicted by low SM (p <0.001), high TAT volume (p = 0.013), and high SAT volume (p = 0.006). In multivariate survival analysis, SM remained an independent prognostic factor (p = 0.039), while TAT and SAT volumes no longer showed predictive ability. This predictive role of SM was confirmed in a subgroup analysis of patients with BCLC stage B.
Conclusions: SM is an independent prognostic factor for survival prediction. Thus, the integration of SM into novel scoring systems could potentially improve survival prediction and clinical decision-making. Fully automated approaches are needed to foster the implementation of this imaging biomarker into daily routine.
Impact and implications: Body composition assessment parameters, especially skeletal muscle volume, have been identified as relevant prognostic factors for many diseases and treatments. In this study, skeletal muscle volume has been identified as an independent prognostic factor for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma undergoing transarterial chemoembolization. Therefore, skeletal muscle volume as a metaparameter could play a role as an opportunistic biomarker in holistic patient assessment and be integrated into decision support systems. Workflow integration with artificial intelligence is essential for automated, quantitative body composition assessment, enabling broad availability in multidisciplinary case discussions.
Beyond well-established difficulties with working memory in individuals with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), evidence is emerging that other memory processes may also be affected. We investigated, first, which memory processes show differences in adults and adolescents with ADHD in comparison to control participants, focusing on working and short-term memory, initial learning, interference, delayed and recognition memory. Second, we investigated whether ADHD severity, co-occurring depressive symptoms, IQ and physical fitness are associated with the memory performance in the individuals with ADHD.
We assessed 205 participants with ADHD (mean age 25.8 years, SD 7.99) and 50 control participants (mean age 21.1 years, SD 5.07) on cognitive tasks including the digit span forward (DSF) and backward (DSB), the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), and the vocabulary and matrix reasoning subtests of the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence. Participants with ADHD were additionally assessed on ADHD severity, depression symptoms and cardiorespiratory fitness. A series of regressions were run, with sensitivity analyses performed when variables were skewed.
ADHD-control comparisons were significant for DSF, DSB, delayed and recognition memory, with people with ADHD performing less well than the control participants. The result for recognition memory was no longer significant in sensitivity analysis. Memory performance was not associated with greater ADHD or depression symptoms severity. IQ was positively associated with all memory variables except DSF. Cardiorespiratory fitness was negatively associated with the majority of RAVLT variables.
Individuals with ADHD showed difficulties with working memory, short-term memory and delayed memory, as well as a potential difficulty with recognition memory, despite preserved initial learning.
Inflammation is a regulated reaction of the body to control a threat such as infection or injury. An efficient resolution of inflammation is critical to prevent the development of chronic inflammation and to restore tissue homeostasis. Macrophages (Mf) play a crucial role in the onset, but also in the resolution of inflammation, because they phagocytose and eliminate pathogens and tissue debris. Efficient efferocytosis, i.e. the engulfment of apoptotic cells, represents an important trigger for the onset of the resolution response and contributes to the pro-resolving reprogramming of Mf. Despite the importance of post- transcriptional modes of regulation during the resolution phase and translational control as a key node modulating gene expression in immune cells, relevant translational alterations remain largely elusive.
In the present study, I aimed to identify translationally regulated targets in inflammatory primary murine Mf upon resolution-promoting efferocytosis. To this end, I used total RNA-sequencing as well as de novo proteomics analyses to determine global transcriptional and translational changes. Sequencing data confirmed that efferocytosis induced a pro-resolution signature in inflammatory Mf and pointed towards translational regulation because the related integrated stress response was enriched upon efferocytosis. While changes of gene expression between efferocytic and non-efferocytic Mf appeared rather small at the transcriptional level, I observed considerable differences at the level of de novo synthesized proteins. This finding suggests a regulation at the level of translation. Furthermore, the tight connection between translational and metabolic changes was confirmed by enriched metabolism-associated terms of targets upregulated by efferocytosis at both RNA and de novo protein level. Interestingly, analysis of translationally regulated targets in response to inflammatory stimulation showed reduced translation for most targets, with only little impact of efferocytosis. Among those targets, I identified pro-resolving matrix metallopeptidase 12 (Mmp12) as a novel candidate, which showed translational repression during early inflammation and translational increase during the resolution phase. Noteworthy, a first indicator for a potential translation regulatory component of Mmp12 were the extremely high mRNA levels and not overly high de novo protein levels. Validation experiments recapitulated a slight elevation of Mmp12 mRNA expression and a significant downregulation of MMP12 intracellular protein levels in inflammatory Mf, as observed in the RNA-seq and de novo proteomics datasets. To investigate whether the discrepancy in mRNA and protein expression were due to changes in translation, I applied polysomal fractionation analysis to determine the translational status of Mmp12. Inflammatory Mf displayed a significantly lower relative Mmp12 mRNA abundance in the late polysomes compared to naïve Mf, suggesting reduced translational efficiency upon inflammatory stimulation. Consequently, extracellular MMP12 levels in the supernatant of inflammatory Mf decreased, although with a slight delay.
The functional impact of attenuated Mmp12 translation upon inflammatory stimulation was assessed in migration assays. While siRNA-mediated knockdown of Mmp12 did not alter Mf migration on uncoated plates, it increased migration 3-fold on matrigel/elastin-coated plates. Importantly, the increase in migrated distance driven by siMmp12 could be lowered by the addition of exogenous recombinant MMP12 protein. In line with reduced Mmp12 translation and MMP12 protein in inflammatory Mf, I observed a significant increase in cell migration on matrigel/elastin-coated plates, while it remained unaltered on uncoated plates. Consequently, Mf elastase MMP12 degrades elastin, thereby cell migration along elastin fibers is diminished. In inflammatory Mf, Mmp12 is translationally downregulated, thereby enhancing the migratory capacity.
In summary, the present study identifies a substantial contribution of translational regulation in the course of inflammation shown by high changes between inflammatory naïve and efferocytic Mf at the de novo proteomic level. Specifically, I was able to determine the translational regulation of pro-resolving Mmp12, which is repressed during early inflammation and recovers during the resolution phase. Functionally, translational control of MMP12 emerged as a strategy to alter the migratory properties of Mf, enabling enhanced, matrix- dependent migration of Mf during the early inflammatory phase, while restricting migration during the resolution phase.
Highlights
• TAM polarization induces CP RNA.
• CP RNA expression is regulated by HIF-2 and STAT1.
• CP RNA is transferred from TAMs to HT1080 cells.
• CP RNA is translated by HT1080 cells and protects from ferroptosis.
• Co-cultured HT1080 cells decrease iron and lipid peroxidation.
Abstract
Solid tumors are characterized by hypoxic areas, which are prone for macrophage infiltration. Once infiltrated, macrophages polarize to tumor associated macrophages (TAM) to support tumor progression. Therefore, the crosstalk between TAMs and tumor cells is of current interest for the development of novel therapeutic strategies. These may comprise induction of an iron- and lipid peroxidation-dependent form of cell death, known as ferroptosis. To study the macrophage - tumor cell crosstalk we polarized primary human macrophages towards a TAM-like phenotype, co-cultured them with HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells, and analyzed the tumor cell response to ferroptosis induction. In TAMs the expression of ceruloplasmin mRNA increased, which was driven by hypoxia inducible factor 2 and signal transducer and activator of transcription 1. Subsequently, ceruloplasmin mRNA was transferred from TAMs to HT1080 cells via extracellular vesicles. In tumor cells, mRNA was translated into protein to protect HT1080 cells from RSL3-induced ferroptosis. Mechanistically this was based on reduced iron abundance and lipid peroxidation. Interestingly, in naïve macrophages also hypoxia induced ceruloplasmin under hypoxia and a co-culture of HT1080 cells with hypoxic macrophages recapitulated the protective effect observed in TAM co-cultures. In conclusion, TAMs provoke tumor cells to release iron and thereby protect them from lipid peroxidation/ferroptosis.
In Deutschland leidet ca. jeder zehnte Mensch über 40 Jahren an einer chronischen Einschränkung seiner Nierenfunktion. Nicht wenige davon sind im Laufe der Erkrankung auf eine Nierenersatztherapie angewiesen. Die Ursachen für eine Nierenschädigung sind vielfältig. Als neuartiger und vielversprechender Therapieansatz werden aktuell Mesenchymale Stamm-/Stromazellen (MSC) als Therapeutikum für diverse Nierenerkrankungen getestet. Erste Ergebnisse klinischer Phase-I-Studien zeigen, dass MSC sicher als Immunsuppressivum nach Nierentransplantation angewendet werden können. Auch für weitere Erkrankungen der Niere sind erste klinische Studien am Laufen. MSC gelten als regenerativ, immunsupprimierend und antientzündlich. Dennoch gibt es noch einige Limitationen. Nach der Transplantation der Zellen ist das Wachstum der Zellen oft eingeschränkt und es kommt zur vermehrten Apoptose. Auch wird immer wieder ein paradoxes und entzündungsförderndes Verhalten der MSC am Wirkort beobachtet. Ein wichtiger Lösungsansatz ist eine in vitro Vorbehandlung der MSC zur Modulierung der zellulären Eigenschaften. In dieser Arbeit wurden drei Substanzen und Arzneimittel auf ihre Fähigkeit untersucht, die entzündungshemmenden Eigenschaften der MSC zu verbessern und die entzündungsfördernden zu unterdrücken. Der Fokus lag hierbei auf dem Arzneimittel Niclosamid und den beiden bisher noch nicht zugelassenen Substanzen Berberin und Gedunin, die alle in vitro und in vivo bereits erste vielversprechende antientzündliche Wirkungen bewiesen haben. Für diese Arbeit wurden MSC aus Fettgewebe isoliert (ASC) und mit LPS oder einem Cytokin-Mix (Mischung aus TNF-α, IFN-γ und IL-1β) sowie den drei Substanzen stimuliert. Untersucht wurden im Anschluss die mRNA-Expressionen der gängigsten proinflammatorischen (TNF-α, IL-6, TLR-4, ICAM-1, HLA-DR) und antiinflammatorischen Marker (IDO, IL-10), sowie mittels ELISA die Protein-Freisetzung von IL-6 und IL-8. Die vielversprechendsten Ergebnisse ließen sich durch Berberin hervorrufen. Hier zeigte sich eine deutliche Senkung der IL-8-Konzentration im ELISA. Die Anwendung des Gedunin hatte keine signifikante Wirkung auf die ASC. Niclosamid hingegen scheint widererwarten sogar entzündungsfördernd zu wirken, in dem es die IL-6-, ICAM-1-mRNA-Expression steigerte und die IDO-mRNA-Expression absenkte. Unter den drei getesteten Subtanzen hat Berberin die beste Wirkung bewiesen. Nach weiterer Testung könnte eine Anwendung mit Berberin als in vitro Präkonditionierung von MSC vielversprechend sein. Die Verwendung von Niclosamid hingegen sollte vermieden werden, die Wirkung von Gedunin müsste genauer untersucht werden.