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Gerlach zum zweiten Mal in den Rat der Gesundheitsweisen berufen Foto: Institut für Allgemeinmedizin
(2010)
Für eine erfolgreiche Behandlung mit implantatprothetischen Therapiekonzepten ist eine stabile Implantat-Abutment-Verbindung entscheidend. Vor allem die Abutmentschraube als komplikationsanfälligste Komponente dieser Verbindung steht im Mittelpunkt zahlreicher wissenschaftlicher Untersuchungen. Implantate und Komponenten aus Zirkoniumdioxid sind schon seit einigen Jahren auf dem Markt erhältlich. Dennoch gibt es keine Studien, die sich mit der Vorspannkraft von Schrauben bei Implantaten und Abutments aus Zirkoniumdioxid beschäftigen. Ebenso wurden bisher noch keine Schrauben mit Feingewinde im Bereich der Implantologie untersucht. Die vorliegende Studie soll den beschriebenen Forschungsbedarf abdecken.
Um zu ermitteln, in wieweit die Schraubengeometrie Einfluss auf die Vorspannkraft bei Implantat-Abutment-Verbindungen aus Zirkoniumdioxid hat, wurden verschiedene Schrauben hergestellt. Mit einem Schraubenkopfwinkel von 90° wurden Schrauben mit Feingewinde (M1,4x0,2) und 2, 4 und 6 Gewindegängen produziert. Zur Variation des Schraubenkopfwinkels wurden Schrauben mit Feingewinde und 4 Gewindegängen sowie einem Schraubenkopfwinkel von 30° und 60° hergestellt. Es wurden Gewindehülsen als Implantat-Analog und Schraubenkopfauflagen aus Zirkoniumdioxid extern hergestellt und eingekauft (Firma Microceram, Meißen, Deutschland).
Um die Vorspannkraft der Verbindung messen zu können, wurden die Prüfkörper in eine zu diesem Zweck entwickelte Messeinheit integriert. Die Messeinheit besteht aus einem Gerüstzylinder, der als Rahmenkonstrukt dient. Im Inneren des Gerüstzylinders befindet sich die Gewindehülse als Implantat-Analog in einem Spannfutter, das in direkter Verbindung mit dem Messsensor steht. In einer Fassung über der Gewindehülse befindet sich die Schraubenkopfauflage als Abutment-Analog. Gewindehülse und Schraubenkopfauflage stehen dabei nicht in direktem Kontakt. Erst durch die Versuchsschrauben kommt diese Verbindung zustande. Die Zugkraft, die beim Anziehen der Schraubenverbindung entsteht, wird vom Sensor registriert. Er leitet daraus die Vorspannkraft der Verbindung ab.
Jede Prüfverbindung wurde mit vier aufeinander folgenden Anzugsdrehmomenten angezogen (15 Ncm, 20 Ncm, 25 Ncm und 30 Ncm). Nach jedem Anzugsvorgang erfolgte die Messung der Vorspannkraft. Die Messwerte sind somit in Abhängigkeit des Anzugsdrehmoments erhoben worden.
Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Gewindegangzahl der Schrauben keinen Einfluss auf die erzielte Vorspannkraft der Verbindung hat. Die gemessenen Vorspannkräfte bei Schrauben mit 2, 4 und 6 Gewindegängen weisen einen nahezu linearen Einfluss des Anzugsdrehmoments auf die Vorspannkraft nach: Je höher das Anzugsdrehmoment, desto höher auch die ermittelte Vorspannkraft.
Der Schraubenkopfwinkel hingegen zeigte einen Einfluss auf die Vorspannkraft. Bei einem sehr steilen Schraubenkopfwinkel von 30° wurden die geringsten Werte für die Vorspannkraft ermittelt, bei einem Schraubenkopfwinkel von 90° die Höchsten.
Die Ergebnisse dieser Studie wurden mit Ergebnissen einer anderen Versuchsgruppe verglichen, die im selben Versuchsaufbau Schrauben mit gleicher Konfiguration, aber Regelgewinde (M1,6x0,35) statt Feingewinde und größerem Schraubendurchmesser untersuchten. Im Vergleich der Ergebnisse ergab sich kein Vorteil im Bezug auf die erzielte Vorspannkraft bei Schrauben mit Feingewinde.
Schrauben mit 2 Gewindegängen lieferten eine ähnliche Vorspannkraft wie Schrauben mit 4 oder 6 Gewindegängen. Dies legt die Möglichkeit nahe, kürzere Schrauben und somit kürzere Implantate zu entwickeln, um aufwendige Augmentationsmaßnahmen bei geringer Restknochenhöhe umgehen zu können. Vorher müssen jedoch weitere Untersuchungen folgen, um die Stabilität von Schrauben mit 2 Gewindegängen zu überprüfen.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war die Untersuchung der Kurzzeitdynamik zirkulierender Tumorzellen bei hepatozellulären Karzinompatienten, die erstmalig eine radiologische Intervention in Form einer transarteriellen Chemoembolisation oder einer Mikrowellenablation als Therapie erhielten. Dafür wurde in Vorversuchen eine neuartige Methode zur Isolation und Detektion von zirkulierenden Tumorzellen entwickelt.
Zugleich sollte ein potenzieller Einsatz dieser Methode als Screeningverfahren für hepatozelluläre Karzinompatienten mithilfe der Sensitivität und Spezifität überprüft werden. Darüber hinaus wurde eine mögliche Korrelation der Kurzzeitdynamik zirkulierender Tumorzellen sowohl mit der Kurzzeitdynamik des AFP-Wertes als anerkannten HCC-Tumormarker, als auch des IL-6-Wertes als aktuell diskutierten Tumormarker analysiert. Ferner wurde die Kurzzeitdynamik zirkulierender Tumorzellen mit dem klinischen Verlauf der Patienten verglichen.
Im Zeitraum von September 2017 bis Juni 2018 konnten Blutproben von 18 Patienten mit einem hepatozellulären Karzinom untersucht werden. Davon wurden zehn Patienten mittels Mikrowellenablation und acht Patienten mittels transarterieller Chemoembolisation behandelt. Daneben wurden Blutproben von 13 gesunden Probanden ausgewertet.
Methodisch wurden jeweils im Anschluss an die Gewinnung des Patientenblutes, vor und unmittelbar nach jeweiliger radiologischer Intervention, die zirkulierenden Tumorzellen aus dem Blut isoliert und die gewonnenen Zellen durch die Durchflusszytometrie nachgewiesen und quantifiziert. Als zirkulierende Tumorzellen wurden dabei jene Zellen betrachtet, die eine Negativität auf den Marker CD45 sowie eine Positivität auf die Marker ASGPR-1, CD146, CD274 und CD90 zeigten.
Durch den Vergleich der Proben vor und nach radiologischer Intervention konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Anzahlen zirkulierender Tumorzellen nach der radiologischen Intervention im Mittel niedriger sind als vor der Therapie. Die Anzahl zirkulierender Tumorzellen sank dabei im Schnitt bei den mit Mikrowellenablation behandelten Patienten stärker im Vergleich zu denen, die eine transarterielle Chemoembolisation erhielten. Dies bestätigte den klinischen Verlauf der Patientengruppen, da die Mortalität der Gruppe, die eine transarterielle Chemoembolisation erhielten deutlich höher war als bei den übrigen Patienten.
Als klinisch einsetzbare Screening-Methode im Sinne einer „Liquid Biopsy“ für das HCC müssen die Sensitivität und Spezifität weitergehend optimiert werden. Eine signifikante Korrelation zwischen der Kurzzeitdynamik der Anzahlen zirkulierender Tumorzellen und der Kurzzeitdynamik der AFP-Werte und der IL-6-Werte konnte nicht festgestellt werden. Entgegen des erwarteten Trends, legte die angewendete Methode, durch das Absinken der zirkulierenden Tumorzellen, die positive Wirkung der transarteriellen Chemoembolisation und der Mikrowellenablation in hepatozellulären Karzinompatienten dar.
Purpose: To compare Cancer-specific mortality (CSM) in patients with Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) vs. non-SCC penile cancer, since survival outcomes may differ between histological subtypes. Methods: Within the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database (2004–2016), penile cancer patients of all stages were identified. Temporal trend analyses, cumulative incidence and Kaplan–Meier plots, multivariable Cox regression and Fine and Gray competing-risks regression analyses tested for CSM differences between non-SCC vs. SCC penile cancer patients. Results: Of 4,120 eligible penile cancer patients, 123 (3%) harbored non-SCC vs. 4,027 (97%) SCC. Of all non-SCC patients, 51 (41%) harbored melanomas, 42 (34%) basal cell carcinomas, 10 (8%) adenocarcinomas, eight (6.5%) skin appendage malignancies, six (5%) epithelial cell neoplasms, two (1.5%) neuroendocrine tumors, two (1.5%) lymphomas, two (1.5%) sarcomas. Stage at presentation differed between non-SCC vs. SCC. In temporal trend analyses, non-SCC diagnoses neither decreased nor increased over time (p > 0.05). After stratification according to localized, locally advanced, and metastatic stage, no CSM differences were observed between non-SCC vs. SCC, with 5-year survival rates of 11 vs 11% (p = 0.9) for localized, 33 vs. 37% (p = 0.4) for locally advanced, and 1-year survival rates of 37 vs. 53% (p = 0.9) for metastatic penile cancer, respectively. After propensity score matching for patient and tumor characteristics and additional multivariable adjustment, no CSM differences between non-SCC vs. SCC were observed. Conclusion: Non-SCC penile cancer is rare. Although exceptions exist, on average, non-SCC penile cancer has comparable CSM as SCC penile cancer patients, after stratification for localized, locally invasive, and metastatic disease.
Purpose: In patients with pyogenic spondylodiscitis, surgery is considered the treatment of choice to conduct proper debridement, stabilise the spine and avoid extended bed rest, which in turn is a risk factor for complications such as deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Methods: We conducted a retrospective clinical study with analysis of a group of 99 patients who had undergone treatment for pyogenic discitis at our institution between June 2012 and August 2017. Included parameters were age, sex, disease pattern, the presence of deep vein thrombosis, resuscitation, in-hospital mortality, present anticoagulation, preexisting comorbidities, tobacco abuse, body mass index, microbiological germ detection and laboratory results. Results: Among the analysed cohort, 12% of the treated patients for pyogenic spondylodiscitis suffered from a radiologically confirmed pulmonary embolism. Coronary heart disease (p < 0.01), female sex (p < 0.01), anticoagulation at admission (p < 0.01) and non-O blood type (p < 0.001) were associated with development of pulmonary embolism. Pulmonary embolism was significantly associated with resuscitation (p < 0.005) and deep vein thrombosis (p < 0.001). Neurosurgery was not associated with increased risk for pulmonary embolism compared to conservative-treated patients (p > 0.05). Conclusion: Surgery for pyogenic spondylodiscitis was not associated with an elevated risk of pulmonary embolism in our analysis. However, we describe several risk factors for pulmonary embolism in this vulnerable cohort. Prospective studies are necessary to improve prevention and postoperative management in patients with pyogenic spondylodiscitis.
HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 genetic diversity modulates response to lithium in bipolar affective disorders
(2021)
Bipolar affective disorder (BD) is a severe psychiatric illness, for which lithium (Li) is the gold standard for acute and maintenance therapies. The therapeutic response to Li in BD is heterogeneous and reliable biomarkers allowing patients stratification are still needed. A GWAS performed by the International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) has recently identified genetic markers associated with treatment responses to Li in the human leukocyte antigens (HLA) region. To better understand the molecular mechanisms underlying this association, we have genetically imputed the classical alleles of the HLA region in the European patients of the ConLiGen cohort. We found our best signal for amino-acid variants belonging to the HLA-DRB1*11:01 classical allele, associated with a better response to Li (p < 1 × 10−3; FDR < 0.09 in the recessive model). Alanine or Leucine at position 74 of the HLA-DRB1 heavy chain was associated with a good response while Arginine or Glutamic acid with a poor response. As these variants have been implicated in common inflammatory/autoimmune processes, our findings strongly suggest that HLA-mediated low inflammatory background may contribute to the efficient response to Li in BD patients, while an inflammatory status overriding Li anti-inflammatory properties would favor a weak response.
TRIANNI mice carry an entire set of human immunoglobulin V region gene segments and are a powerful tool to rapidly isolate human monoclonal antibodies. After immunizing these mice with DNA encoding the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 and boosting with spike protein, we identified 29 hybridoma antibodies that reacted with the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. Nine antibodies neutralize SARS-CoV-2 infection at IC50 values in the subnanomolar range. ELISA-binding studies and DNA sequence analyses revealed one cluster of three clonally related neutralizing antibodies that target the receptor-binding domain and compete with the cellular receptor hACE2. A second cluster of six clonally related neutralizing antibodies bind to the N-terminal domain of the spike protein without competing with the binding of hACE2 or cluster 1 antibodies. SARS-CoV-2 mutants selected for resistance to an antibody from one cluster are still neutralized by an antibody from the other cluster. Antibodies from both clusters markedly reduced viral spread in mice transgenic for human ACE2 and protected the animals from SARS-CoV-2-induced weight loss. The two clusters of potent noncompeting SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies provide potential candidates for therapy and prophylaxis of COVID-19. The study further supports transgenic animals with a human immunoglobulin gene repertoire as a powerful platform in pandemic preparedness initiatives.
Purpose: Scientific and clinical achievements in radiation, medical, and surgical oncology are changing the landscape of interdisciplinary oncology. The German Society for Radiation Oncology (DEGRO) working group of young clinicians and scientists (yDEGRO) and the DEGRO representation of associate and full professors (AKRO) are aware of the essential role of radiation oncology in multidisciplinary treatment approaches. Together, yDEGRO and AKRO endorsed developing a German radiotherapy & radiation oncology vision 2030 to address future challenges in patient care, research, and education. The vision 2030 aims to identify priorities and goals for the next decade in the field of radiation oncology. Methods: The vision development comprised three phases. During the first phase, areas of interest, objectives, and the process of vision development were defined jointly by the yDEGRO, AKRO, and the DEGRO board. In the second phase, a one-day strategy retreat was held to develop AKRO and yDEGRO representatives’ final vision from medicine, biology, and physics. The third phase was dedicated to vision interpretation and program development by yDEGRO representatives. Results: The strategy retreat’s development process resulted in conception of the final vision “Innovative radiation oncology Together – Precise, Personalized, Human.” The first term “Innovative radiation oncology” comprises the promotion of preclinical research and clinical trials and highlights the development of a national committee for strategic development in radiation oncology research. The term “together” underpins collaborations within radiation oncology departments as well as with other partners in the clinical and scientific setting. “Precise” mainly covers technological precision in radiotherapy as well as targeted oncologic therapeutics. “Personalized” emphasizes biology-directed individualization of radiation treatment. Finally, “Human” underlines the patient-centered approach and points towards the need for individual longer-term career curricula for clinicians and researchers in the field. Conclusion: The vision 2030 balances the ambition of physical, technological, and biological innovation as well as a comprehensive, patient-centered, and collaborative approach towards radiotherapy & radiation oncology in Germany.
Background: Cases of immune complex vasculitis have been reported following COVID-19 infections; so far none in association with novel mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccination. This case report describes a cutaneous immune complex vasculitis after vaccination with BNT162b2. Case presentation: A 76-year old male with liver cirrhosis developed an immune complex vasculitis 12 days after the second injection of BNT162b2. On physical examination, the patient presented with pruritic purpuric macules on hands and feet, flexor and extensor parts of both legs and thighs and lower abdomen, and bloody diarrhoea. Laboratory testing showed elevated inflammatory markers. After short treatment with oral steroids all clinical manifestations and laboratory findings resolved. Conclusions: An increasing number of clinical manifestations have been attributed to COVID-19 infection and vaccination. This is the first written report of immune complex vasculitis after vaccination with BNT162b2. We present our case report and a discussion in the light of type three hypersensitivity reaction.
Rationale: Both attention deficit-/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and alcohol use disorder (AUD) are accompanied by deficits in response inhibition. Furthermore, the prevalence of comorbidity of ADHD and AUD is high. However, there is a lack of research on whether the same neuronal subprocesses of inhibition (i.e., interference inhibition, action withholding and action cancellation) exhibit deficits in both psychiatric disorders. Methods: We examined these three neural subprocesses of response inhibition in patient groups and healthy controls: non-medicated individuals with ADHD (ADHD; N = 16), recently detoxified and abstinent individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD; N = 15), and healthy controls (HC; N = 15). A hybrid response inhibition task covering interference inhibition, action withholding, and action cancellation was applied using a 3T functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Results: Individuals with ADHD showed an overall stronger hypoactivation in attention related brain areas compared to AUD or HC during action withholding. Further, this hypoactivation was more accentuated during action cancellation. Individuals with AUD recruited a broader network, including the striatum, compared to HC during action withholding. During action cancellation, however, they showed hypoactivation in motor regions. Additionally, specific neural activation profiles regarding group and subprocess became apparent. Conclusions: Even though deficits in response inhibition are related to both ADHD and AUD, neural activation and recruited networks during response inhibition differ regarding both neuronal subprocesses and examined groups. While a replication of this study is needed in a larger sample, the results suggest that tasks have to be carefully selected when examining neural activation patterns of response inhibition either in research on various psychiatric disorders or transdiagnostic questions.
Patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NET) often go through a long phase between onset of symptoms and initial diagnosis. Assessment of time to diagnosis and pre-clinical pathway in patients with gastroenteropancreatic NET (GEP-NET) with regard to metastases and symptoms. Retrospective analysis of patients with GEP-NET at a tertiary referral center from 1984 to 2019; inclusion criteria: Patients ≥18 years, diagnosis of GEP-NET; statistical analysis using non-parametrical methods. Four hundred eighty-six patients with 488 tumors were identified; median age at first diagnosis (478/486, 8 unknown) was 59 years; 52.9% male patients. Pancreatic NET: 143/488 tumors; 29.3%; small intestinal NET: 145/488 tumors, 29.7%. 128/303 patients (42.2%) showed NET specific and 122/486 (25%) patients other tumor-specific symptoms. 222/279 patients had distant metastases at initial diagnosis (187/222 liver metastases). 154/488 (31.6%) of GEP-NET were incidental findings. Median time from tumor manifestation (e.g., symptoms related to NET) to initial diagnosis across all entities was 19.5 (95% CI: 12–28) days. No significant difference in patients with or without distant metastases (median 73 vs 105 days, P = .42). A large proportion of GEP-NET are incidental findings and only about half of all patients are symptomatic at the time of diagnosis. We did not find a significant influence of the presence of metastases on time to diagnosis, which shows a large variability with a median of <30 days.
Purpose: Early detection of adenocarcinomas in the esophagus is crucial for achieving curative endoscopic therapy. Targeted biopsies of suspicious lesions, as well as four-quadrant biopsies, represent the current diagnostic standard. However, this procedure is time-consuming, cost-intensive, and examiner-dependent. The aim of this study was to test whether impedance spectroscopy is capable of distinguishing between healthy, premalignant, and malignant lesions. An ex vivo measurement method was developed to examine esophageal lesions using impedance spectroscopy immediately after endoscopic resection. Methods: After endoscopic resection of suspicious lesions in the esophagus, impedance measurements were performed on resected cork-covered tissue using a measuring head that was developed, with eight gold electrodes, over 10 different measurement settings and with frequencies from 100 Hz to 1 MHz. Results: A total of 105 measurements were performed in 60 patients. A dataset of 400 per investigation and a total of more than 42,000 impedance measurements were therefore collected. Electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) was able to detect dysplastic esophageal mucosa with a sensitivity of 81% in Barrett’s esophagus. Conclusion: In summary, EIS was able to distinguish different tissue characteristics in the different esophageal tissues. EIS thus holds potential for further development of targeted biopsies during surveillance endoscopy.
Introduction: In an emergency department, the majority of pediatric trauma patients present because of minor injuries. The aim of this study was to evaluate temporal changes in age-related injury pattern, trauma mechanism, and surgeries in pediatric patients. Methods: This retrospective study included patients < 18 years of age following trauma from 01/2009 to 12/2018 at a level I trauma center. They were divided into two groups: group A (A: 01/2009 to 12/2013) and group B (B: 01/2014 to 12/2018). Injury mechanism, injury pattern, and surgeries were analyzed. As major injuries fractures, dislocations, and organ injuries and as minor injuries contusions and superficial wounds were defined. Results: 23,582 patients were included (58% male, median age 8.2 years). There was a slight increase in patients comparing A (n = 11,557) and B (n = 12,025) with no difference concerning demographic characteristics. Significant more patients (A: 1.9%; B: 2.4%) were admitted to resuscitation room, though the number of multiple injured patients was not significantly different. In A (25.5%), major injuries occurred significantly less frequently than in B (27.0%), minor injuries occurred equally. Extremity fractures were significantly more frequent in B (21.5%) than in A (20.2%), peaking at 8–12 years. Most trauma mechanisms of both groups were constant, with a rising of sport injuries at 8–12 years. Conclusion: Although number of patients increases only slightly over a decade, there was a clear increase in major injuries, particularly extremity fractures, peaking at 8–12 years. At this age also sport accidents significantly increased. At least, admittance to resuscitation room rose but without an increase of multiple injured patients.
Introduction: Improvements in both musculoskeletal and non-musculoskeletal manifestations are important treatment goals in psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Objective: These post hoc analyses determined whether additional benefits related to various PsA domains are observed in patients simultaneously achieving 50% improvement in American College of Rheumatology criteria (ACR50) and 100% improvement in Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI100), the primary endpoint of the SPIRIT-H2H study. Methods: Patients with active PsA and psoriasis in SPIRIT-H2H (N = 566) were categorised into two sets of four response groups irrespective of treatment allocation (approved dosages of ixekizumab or adalimumab): patients who simultaneously achieved ACR50 and PASI100 response, achieved ACR50 response only, achieved PASI100 response only, or did not achieve ACR50 or PASI100 response after 24 and 52 weeks of treatment. Patients achieving simultaneous ACR50 and PASI100 response were compared with the other patient response groups at the corresponding time point for efficacy and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes. Results: Patients simultaneously achieving ACR50 and PASI100 responses at week 24 or 52 showed higher rates of ACR70 response, minimal disease activity, Disease Activity in Psoriatic Arthritis ≤ 4, resolution of enthesitis and dactylitis, and HRQoL improvement at weeks 24 and 52, respectively, than the other corresponding response groups at both time points. Conclusion: High levels of disease control, such as those obtained with simultaneous achievement of ACR50 and PASI100 response, were linked to better outcomes across a wide range of endpoints that are important for patients with PsA. Patients meeting this combined endpoint showed more comprehensive and thus greater control of disease activity.
Purpose: To investigate short-term (3 months follow-up) changes in visual quality following Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) for Fuchs endothelial dystrophy (FED). Methods: In this prospective institutional case series, 51 patients that underwent DMEK for FED were included. Assessment included the Quality of Vision (QoV) questionnaire preoperatively, at 1 month, and 3 months after surgery. Secondary outcome measures were anterior segment parameters acquired by Scheimpflug imaging, corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA), and endothelial cell density (ECD). Results: Glare, hazy vision, blurred vision, and daily fluctuation in vision were the symptoms mostly reported preoperatively. All symptoms demonstrated a significant reduction of item scores for severity, frequency, and bothersome in the course after DMEK (P < 0.01). Glare and fluctuation in vision remained to some extent during the follow-up period (median score = 1). Preoperatively, corneal densitometry correlated moderately to weakly with severity of hazy vision (rs = 0.39; P = 0.03) and frequency (rs = 0.26; P = 0.02) as well as severity (rs = 0.27; P = 0.03) of blurry vision. CDVA and central corneal thickness (CCT) did not correlate with visual complains. Conclusions: Following DMEK for FED, patient-reported visual symptoms assessed by the QoV questionnaire represent a useful tool providing valuable information on the impact of DMEK on visual quality that cannot be directly estimated by morphological parameters and visual acuity only.
Background: Due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, interventions in the upper airways are considered high-risk procedures for otolaryngologists and their colleagues. The purpose of this study was to evaluate limitations in hearing and communication when using a powered air-purifying respirator (PAPR) system to protect against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission and to assess the benefit of a headset. Methods: Acoustic properties of the PAPR system were measured using a head and torso simulator. Audiological tests (tone audiometry, Freiburg speech test, Oldenburg sentence test (OLSA)) were performed in normal-hearing subjects (n = 10) to assess hearing with PAPR. The audiological test setup also included simulation of conditions in which the target speaker used either a PAPR, a filtering face piece (FFP) 3 respirator, or a surgical face mask. Results: Audiological measurements revealed that sound insulation by the PAPR headtop and noise, generated by the blower-assisted respiratory protection system, resulted in significantly deteriorated hearing thresholds (4.0 ± 7.2 dB hearing level (HL) vs. 49.2 ± 11.0
Objectives: To evaluate the predictive value of volumetric bone mineral density (BMD) assessment of the lumbar spine derived from phantomless dual-energy CT (DECT)-based volumetric material decomposition as an indicator for the 2-year occurrence risk of osteoporosis-associated fractures. Methods: L1 of 92 patients (46 men, 46 women; mean age, 64 years, range, 19–103 years) who had undergone third-generation dual-source DECT between 01/2016 and 12/2018 was retrospectively analyzed. For phantomless BMD assessment, dedicated DECT postprocessing software using material decomposition was applied. Digital files of all patients were sighted for 2 years following DECT to obtain the incidence of osteoporotic fractures. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to calculate cut-off values and logistic regression models were used to determine associations of BMD, sex, and age with the occurrence of osteoporotic fractures. Results: A DECT-derived BMD cut-off of 93.70 mg/cm3 yielded 85.45% sensitivity and 89.19% specificity for the prediction to sustain one or more osteoporosis-associated fractures within 2 years after BMD measurement. DECT-derived BMD was significantly associated with the occurrence of new fractures (odds ratio of 0.8710, 95% CI, 0.091–0.9375, p < .001), indicating a protective effect of increased DECT-derived BMD values. Overall AUC was 0.9373 (CI, 0.867–0.977, p < .001) for the differentiation of patients who sustained osteoporosis-associated fractures within 2 years of BMD assessment. Conclusions: Retrospective DECT-based volumetric BMD assessment can accurately predict the 2-year risk to sustain an osteoporosis-associated fracture in at-risk patients without requiring a calibration phantom. Lower DECT-based BMD values are strongly associated with an increased risk to sustain fragility fractures.
Key Points: Dual-energy CT–derived assessment of bone mineral density can identify patients at risk to sustain osteoporosis-associated fractures with a sensitivity of 85.45% and a specificity of 89.19%. The DECT-derived BMD threshold for identification of at-risk patients lies above the American College of Radiology (ACR) QCT guidelines for the identification of osteoporosis (93.70 mg/cm 3 vs 80 mg/cm 3 ).
To explore and describe attitudes and opinions towards suicidality in healthcare professionals (HCPs) working with oncological patients. Methods: A 48-item online questionnaire was developed and distributed to HCPs working with cancer patients. Three hundred fifty-four answered questionnaires were analyzed. Results: The majority of HCPs reported that they were able to understand why a cancer patient would commit suicide (87.8%) or would seek help from an assisted suicide organization (ASO; 83.9%). The understandable reasons were pain and physical impairments (51.4%), social isolation (19.8%), loss of control and autonomy (18.1%), terminal disease (17.2%), loss of meaning (15.3%), desperation (14.7%), and psychic distress (9.3%). Personal experiences with suicidality lead only 44.8% of HCPs to believe that thereby they would be better able to understand a patients’ wish for suicide. Religion was negatively associated with understanding of suicide and why a cancer patient would seek help from an ASO. Knowledge of suicidality was positively associated with why a cancer patient would seek help from an ASO. Conclusions: There is still little knowledge in oncology about the relation of HCPs’ attitudes toward suicidality in their patients and how those attitudes influence their behavior, especially care and treatment of patients. More research on this topic is needed. It stands to reason that more education about suicidality in cancer patients seems likely to improve understanding and attitudes and thereby influence care for cancer patients.
Das Übergangstraining : Maßnahme in der betrieblichen Wiedereingliederung im professionellen Tanz
(2021)
Neben der Vorbeugung von akuten und chronischen Schäden ist im professionellen Bühnentanz bei gesundheitlichen Problemen am Muskel-Skelett-System eine intensive – dem Berufssport vergleichbare – Rehabilitation unter Berücksichtigung tanzspezifischer Bewegungselemente von großer Bedeutung. In Kombination mit anderen, die Leistungsfähigkeit wiederherstellenden Maßnahmen ist das in diesem Beitrag erläuterte sog. Übergangstraining („transition dance class“) als Trainingsform im Rahmen der stufenweisen beruflichen Wiedereingliederung von zentraler Bedeutung, da es die Übergangsphase zwischen allgemeinen Maßnahmen einer Rehabilitation und dem Wiedererreichen der vollständigen Arbeitsfähigkeit im Tanzberuf darstellt.
Für die Funktion und das Überleben von Zellen ist die Aufrechterhaltung und Regulation der Redoxhomöostase durch Produktion und Elimination von radikalen Sauerstoffspezies (ROS) von entscheidender Bedeutung. In Tumorzellen finden sich höhere basale ROS-Level als in gesunden Zellen, was jedoch trotz des vermehrten oxidativen Stresses nicht zur Zelltodinduktion führt, da kompensatorisch antioxidative Mechanismen ebenfalls gesteigert sind. Vor allem zwei antioxidative Systeme sind hauptsächlich bei der Elimination von ROS involviert: das Glutathion (GSH)-System und das Thioredoxin (TRX)-System. Hierbei spielt eine beständige Regeneration von GSH, als auch von TRX, eine wichtige Rolle, da diese bei der Reduktion von Sauerstoffradikalen verbraucht werden. Im hepatozellulären Karzinom (HCC) ist die gestörte Redoxhomöostase mit gesteigerten ROS Leveln ein wichtiger Faktor in der Karzinogenese. Das HCC wird oft erst im fortgeschrittenen, nicht mehr kurativen Stadium diagnostiziert und ist resistent gegenüber nahezu allen Formen von Chemotherapien. Dies verdeutlich die immense Bedeutung der Erforschung der teilweise unverstandenen Tumorgenese, aber auch die Notwendigkeit für die Entwicklung von neuen Therapien.
In der hier dargestellten experimentellen Arbeit gingen wir deshalb der Frage nach, ob die alleinige Inhibierung der antioxidativen Schutzmechanismen durch sog. ROS Modulatoren ausreicht, um eine Zelltodinduktion in humanen HCC-Zelllinien herbeizuführen und damit eine potenzielle neue Therapiestrategie aufzuzeigen.
Wir konnten zeigen, dass die simultane Inhibierung dieser zwei antioxidativen Hauptmechanismen im HCC durch die Kombination von Auranofin (TXR-Inhibitor) mit Buthionine-Sulfoximin (BSO, Glutathion-Inhibitor) und Erastin (indirekter Glutathion-Inhibitor) mit BSO zur ROS-abhängigen Zelltodinduktion im HCC in vitro führt. Interessant ist, dass die gesteigerten ROS-Level jedoch nicht den Zelltod im HCC induzierten, wenn nur eines der beiden antioxidativen Systeme inhibiert wurde. Offenbar ist die Tumorzelle in der Lage durch Hochregulierung anderer antioxidativer Systeme das induzierte ROS zu neutralisieren. Unsere Untersuchungen zum Wirkmechanismus der Zelltodinduktion durch die Kombinationsbehandlungen Auranofin + BSO bzw. Erastin + BSO identifizierten unerwarteterweise eine Caspasen-unabhängige, nicht-apoptotische Zelltodform, die sog Ferroptose, welche durch ROS-Produktion und Lipidperoxidierung charakterisiert ist.
Weitere Experimente konnten untermauern, dass mit der Induktion der Ferroptose durch die selektive ROS-Modulation die Apoptoseresistenz der HCC Zellen umgangen werden kann.
Mechanistisch kann diese erstmals 2012 beschriebene eisenabhängige Zelltodform, Ferroptose, durch zwei verschiedene Signalwege induziert werden: Erstens durch den kanonischen Pfad, bei welchem die Inhibierung der Glutathionperoxidase 4 (GPX4), einem Protein, welches die Zellmembran vor Lipidperoxidation schützt, eine zentrale Rolle spielt, und zweitens durch den nicht-kanonischen Pfad, welcher durch eine Anhäufung von zweiwertigem Eisen u. a. durch Aktivierung von Hämoxygenasen (HO), vermittelt durch den Transkriptionsfaktor Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2), gekennzeichnet ist. Wir konnten feststellen, dass in unseren Kombinationsbehandlungen beide Pfade involviert sind und eine Herunterregulierung von GPX4 als auch eine Akkumulation von Nrf2 und Hämoxygenase-1 (HO-1) besteht.
Zusammenfassend konnte unsere Arbeit zeigen, dass mittels pharmakologischer Adressierung zweier antioxidativer Systeme die Therapieresistenz der HCC-Zellen umgangen werden kann, und dass die Induktion der Ferroptose zukünftig eine vielversprechende Therapieoption im HCC darstellen könnte.
Hintergrund: Seit mehr als 50 Jahren werden in Deutschland Herzschrittmacher-Implantationen durchgeführt, mittlerweile mit mehr als 100.000 Implantationen pro Jahr. Obwohl es sich um einen gängigen Eingriff handelt, existieren wenig prospektiv randomisierte Studien zu technischen Aspekten der Implantation, insbesondere dem Wundverschluss am Ende der Operation. Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, an einem Kollektiv von Patienten unerwünschte Ereignisse und kosmetische Ergebnisse, in Abhängigkeit des beim Hautverschluss verwendeten Nahtmaterials (resorbierbarer bzw. nicht-resorbierbarer Faden), miteinander zu vergleichen.
Methoden: In einem Zeitraum von Juli 2018 bis April 2019 wurden Patienten mit geplanter de novo Herzschrittmacher-Implantation ohne Defibrillationstherapie prospektiv in die Studie eingeschlossen und anhand einer Randomisierungliste in zwei Probandengruppen eingeteilt: nicht-resorbierbares Nahtmaterial (Gruppe Prolene®) bzw. resorbierbares Nahtmaterial (Gruppe Monocryl®).
Ein Tag (Beobachtungszeitpunkt 1), sechs Wochen (Beobachtungszeitpunkt 2) und ein Jahr post-OP (Beobachtungszeitpunkt 3) erfolgte die Beurteilung der Narbe bezüglich des kosmetischen Ergebnisses und klinisch relevanter, unerwünschter Ereignisse. Zur kosmetischen Beurteilung diente die Wundbreite in mm, eine auftretende Kelloidbildung und die „Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale“ (POSA-Score). Dieser wurde zu Beobachtungszeitpunkt 1 seitens des Patienten auf zwei Fragen (Schmerzhaftigkeit, Juckreiz) reduziert. Die erhobenen klinisch relevanten Parameter waren Nachblutungen, Infektionen, Insuffizienz der Naht und Revisions-OP aufgrund eines Lokalbefundes.
Ergebnisse: Es konnten 114 Patienten in die Studie eingeschlossen werden. Zu Beobachtungszeitpunkt 2 und Beobachtungszeitpunkt 3 belief sich die Anzahl auf jeweils 92 Probanden. Zu allen drei Beobachtungszeitpunkten konnte zwischen beiden Gruppen weder ein signifikanter Unterschied im kosmetischen Ergebnis noch im Auftreten klinisch relevanter Ereignisse festgestellt werden.
Schlussfolgerung: Anhand der vorliegenden Studie scheint das verwendete Nahtmaterial keinen großen Einfluss auf das kosmetische Ergebnis der Narbe, sowie auf das Auftreten von unerwünschten Ereignissen zu haben. Eine multizentrische prospektiv randomisierte Studie mit größerer Patientenanzahl ist notwendig, um die hier erhobenen Daten zu verifizieren.
HINTERGRUND: Asthma ist die häufigste chronische Krankheit bei Kindern und Jugendlichen, wobei bei einem Großteil bereits erste Exazerbationen im Vorschulalter auftreten. Diese sind meist mit stationären Aufenthalten verbunden, jedoch gibt es nur wenige detaillierte zeitliche und demografische Untersuchungen dieser besonders schweren Asthmakohorte. Ebenso gibt es kaum Untersuchungen über die Verteilung der Asthmaphänotypen in dieser Altersgruppe.
METHODEN: Es erfolgte eine retrospektive Analyse von 572 Krankenhausaufenthalten im Universitätsklinikum für Kinder- und Jugendmedizin Frankfurt mit der ICD Diagnose Asthma (J.45) zwischen dem 1. Januar 2008 und dem 31. Dezember 2017 bei Kindern im Alter 1-5 Jahren. Die Aufteilung erfolgte in drei Phänotypen. Allergisches Asthma (RAST und/oder Prick-Test positiv), eosinophiles Asthma (Eosinophilie >300/µl und RAST/Prick-Test negativ) und nicht-allergisches Asthma (Eosinophilie ≤300/µl und RAST/Prick-Test negativ). Akut schweres Asthma wurde definiert als akute Dyspnoe, Tachypnoe, Sauerstoffbedarf und/oder systemische Steroidtherapie. Analysiert wurden u.a. Alter, Geschlecht, Liegezeit, Therapie und Re-Hospitalisierungsrate.
ERGEBNISSE: Von 572 Krankenhausaufenthalten mit der Diagnose Asthma erfüllten 205 Patienten die Definition eines akut schweren Asthmas. Von diesen 205 Kindern wurden bereits n=55 (26,8%) vor der stationären Aufnahme mit einem inhalativen Steroid (ICS) behandelt. Die phänotypische Charakterisierung ergab folgende Verteilung: 49% wiesen Allergisches Asthma, 15% Asthma mit atopischer Dermatitis, 10% eosinophiles nicht-allergisches Asthma und 26% nicht-allergisches Asthma. Von diesen Patienten wurden 71.7% mit ICS und 15,1% mit Montelukast als Monotherapie entlassen. Die Rate der Notfallvorstellung (Notfallambulanz und Re-Hospitalisierung) innerhalb von 12 Monaten nach Entlassung war mit n=42 (20,5%) hoch. Die Zahl der Eosinophilen (> 300 µl) hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Re-Hospitalisierung. Es zeigte sich eine hohe Verschreibung von Antibiotika bei Asthma-Patienten (143 (69,8%) der 205 Patienten) während des stationären Aufenthalts, wobei nur 42 Patienten (20,5%) einen CRP-Wert über 2 mg/dl aufwiesen.
Schlussfolgerung: Obwohl die Asthmaprävalenz bei Schulkindern höher ist, leiden Vorschulkinder im Alter von 1-5 Jahren häufiger an schweren Asthma-Exazerbationen mit Hospitalisierung. Trotz protektiver Therapie mit ICS oder Montelukast ist die Re-Hospitalisierungsrate hoch. Die bisherigen Therapiekonzepte reichen in dieser Altersgruppe anscheinend nicht aus, um Patienten mit schwerem Asthma im Vorschulalter ausreichend zu kontrollieren. Neue Therapiekonzepte wie die Triple-Therapie mit Zugabe des Long-Acting Muscarin Rezeptors (Tiotropium) sollten dringend evaluiert werden.
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are nowadays one of the major focuses in tumor research since this subpopulation was revealed to be a great obstacle for successful treatment. The identification of CSCs in pediatric solid tumors harbors major challenges because of the immature character of these tumors. Here, we present CD34, CD90, OV-6 and cell-surface vimentin (csVimentin) as reliable markers to identify CSCs in hepatoblastoma cell lines. We were able to identify CSC characteristics for the subset of CD34+CD90+OV-6+csVimentin+-co-expressing cells, such as pluripotency, self-renewal, increased expression of EMT markers and migration. Treatment with Cisplatin as the standard chemotherapeutic drug in hepatoblastoma therapy further revealed the chemo-resistance of this subset, which is a main characteristic of CSCs. When we treated the cells with the Hsp90 inhibitor 17-AAG, we observed a significant reduction in the CSC subset. With our study, we identified CSCs of hepatoblastoma using CD34, CD90, OV-6 and csVimentin. This set of markers could be helpful to estimate the success of novel therapeutic approaches, as resistant CSCs are responsible for tumor relapses.
Background: Dual-source dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) offers the potential for opportunistic osteoporosis screening by enabling phantomless bone mineral density (BMD) quantification. This study sought to assess the accuracy and precision of volumetric BMD measurement using dual-source DECT in comparison to quantitative CT (QCT). Methods: A validated spine phantom consisting of three lumbar vertebra equivalents with 50 (L1), 100 (L2), and 200 mg/cm3 (L3) calcium hydroxyapatite (HA) concentrations was scanned employing third-generation dual-source DECT and QCT. While BMD assessment based on QCT required an additional standardised bone density calibration phantom, the DECT technique operated by using a dedicated postprocessing software based on material decomposition without requiring calibration phantoms. Accuracy and precision of both modalities were compared by calculating measurement errors. In addition, correlation and agreement analyses were performed using Pearson correlation, linear regression, and Bland-Altman plots. Results: DECT-derived BMD values differed significantly from those obtained by QCT (p < 0.001) and were found to be closer to true HA concentrations. Relative measurement errors were significantly smaller for DECT in comparison to QCT (L1, 0.94% versus 9.68%; L2, 0.28% versus 5.74%; L3, 0.24% versus 3.67%, respectively). DECT demonstrated better BMD measurement repeatability compared to QCT (coefficient of variance < 4.29% for DECT, < 6.74% for QCT). Both methods correlated well to each other (r = 0.9993; 95% confidence interval 0.9984–0.9997; p < 0.001) and revealed substantial agreement in Bland-Altman plots. Conclusions: Phantomless dual-source DECT-based BMD assessment of lumbar vertebra equivalents using material decomposition showed higher diagnostic accuracy compared to QCT.
We investigated the effects of sexual arousal induced by olfactory stimuli on the expression of neuromodulators, neurotransmitters and sexual steroid receptors in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN, the circadian pacemaker of mammals) and other cerebral entities of Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) compared to manual sleep deprivation and immobilization stress. The hamsters kept under a 12:12 hours (h) light:dark cycle were deprived of sleep by sexual stimulation, gentle manual handling or immobilization stress for 1 h at the beginning of the light phase and subsequently sacrificed at zeitgeber time 01:00, respectively; for comparison, hamsters were manually sleep deprived for 6 or 20 h or sacrificed after completing a full sleep phase. As demonstrated by immunohistochemistry, apart from various alterations after manual sleep deprivation, sexual stimulation caused down-regulation of arginine-vasopressin (AVP), vasointestinal peptide (VIP), serotonin (5-HT), substance P (SP), and met-enkephalin (ME) in the SCN. Somatostatin (SOM) was diminished in the medial periventricular nucleus (MPVN). In contrast, an increase in AVP was observed in the PVN, that of oxytocin (OXY) in the supraoptic nucleus (SON), of tyrosine-hydroxylase (TH) in the infundibular nucleus (IN), and dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) in the A7 neuron population of the brain stem (A7), respectively. Testosterone in plasma was increased. The results indicate that sexual arousal extensively influences the neuropeptide systems of the SCN, suggesting an involvement of the SCN in reproductive behavior.
Rodent models of Parkinson’s disease are based on transgenic expression of mutant synuclein, deletion of PD genes, injections of MPTP or rotenone, or seeding of synuclein fibrils. The models show histopathologic features of PD such as Lewi bodies but mostly only subtle in vivo manifestations or systemic toxicity. The models only partly mimic a predominant loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. We therefore generated mice that express the transgenic diphtheria toxin receptor (DTR) specifically in DA neurons by crossing DAT-Cre mice with Rosa26 loxP-STOP-loxP DTR mice. After defining a well-tolerated DTx dose, DAT-DTR and DTR-flfl controls were subjected to non-toxic DTx treatment (5 × 100 pg/g) and subsequent histology and behavioral tests. DAT protein levels were reduced in the midbrain, and tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons were reduced in the substantia nigra, whereas the pan-neuronal marker NeuN was not affected. Despite the promising histologic results, there was no difference in motor function tests or open field behavior. These are tests in which double mutant Pink1−/−SNCAA53T Parkinson mice show behavioral abnormalities. Higher doses of DTx were toxic in both groups. The data suggest that DTx treatment in mice with Cre/loxP-driven DAT-DTR expression leads to partial ablation of DA-neurons but without PD-reminiscent behavioral correlates.
Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) of metastatic neuroendocrine tumors (NET) can be successfully repeated but may eventually be dose-limited. Since 177Lu-DOTATATE dose limitation may come from hematological rather than renal function, hematological peripheral blood stem cell backup might be desirable. Here, we report our initial experience of peripheral blood stem-cell collection (PBSC) in patients with treatment-related cytopenia and therefore high risk of bone-marrow failure. Five patients with diffuse bone-marrow infiltration of NET and relevant myelosuppression (≥grade 2) received PBSC before one PRRT cycle with 177Lu-DOTATATE (7.6 ± 0.8 GBq/cycle). Standard stem-cell mobilization with Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) was applied, and successful PBSC was defined as a collection of >2 × 106/kg CD34+ cells. In case of initial failure, Plerixafor was administered in addition to G-CSF prior to apheresis. PBSC was successfully performed in all patients with no adverse events. Median cumulative activity was 44.8 GBq (range, 21.3–62.4). Three patients had been previously treated with PRRT, two of which needed the addition of Plerixafor for stem-cell mobilization. Only one of five patients required autologous peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation during the median follow up time of 28 months. PBSC collection seems to be feasible in NET with bone-marrow involvement and might be worth considering as a backup strategy prior to PRRT, in order to overcome dose-limiting bone-marrow toxicity.
Gaining detailed knowledge about sex-related immunoregulation remains a crucial prerequisite for the development of adequate disease models and therapeutic strategies enabling personalized medicine. Here, the key parameter of the production of cytokines mediating disease resolution was investigated. Among these cytokines, STAT3-activating interleukin (IL)-22 is principally associated with recovery from tissue injury. By investigating paradigmatic acetaminophen-induced liver injury, we demonstrated that IL-22 expression is enhanced in female mice. Increased female IL-22 was confirmed at a cellular level using murine splenocytes stimulated by lipopolysaccharide or αCD3/CD28 to model innate or adaptive immunoactivation. Interestingly, testosterone or dihydrotestosterone reduced IL-22 production by female but not by male splenocytes. Mechanistic studies on PMA/PHA-stimulated T-cell-lymphoma EL-4 cells verified the capability of testosterone/dihydrotestosterone to reduce IL-22 production. Moreover, we demonstrated by chromatin immunoprecipitation that testosterone impairs binding of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor to xenobiotic responsive elements within the murine IL-22 promoter. Overall, female mice undergoing acute liver injury and cultured female splenocytes upon inflammatory activation display increased IL-22. This observation is likely related to the immunosuppressive effects of androgens in males. The data presented concur with more pronounced immunological alertness demonstrable in females, which may relate to the sex-specific course of some immunological disorders.
The coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is the cause of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Most SARS-CoV-2 infections are mild or even asymptomatic. However, a small fraction of infected individuals develops severe, life-threatening disease, which is caused by an uncontrolled immune response resulting in hyperinflammation. However, the factors predisposing individuals to severe disease remain poorly understood. Here, we show that levels of CD47, which is known to mediate immune escape in cancer and virus-infected cells, are elevated in SARS-CoV-2-infected Caco-2 cells, Calu-3 cells, and air−liquid interface cultures of primary human bronchial epithelial cells. Moreover, SARS-CoV-2 infection increases SIRPalpha levels, the binding partner of CD47, on primary human monocytes. Systematic literature searches further indicated that known risk factors such as older age and diabetes are associated with increased CD47 levels. High CD47 levels contribute to vascular disease, vasoconstriction, and hypertension, conditions that may predispose SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals to COVID-19-related complications such as pulmonary hypertension, lung fibrosis, myocardial injury, stroke, and acute kidney injury. Hence, age-related and virus-induced CD47 expression is a candidate mechanism potentially contributing to severe COVID-19, as well as a therapeutic target, which may be addressed by antibodies and small molecules. Further research will be needed to investigate the potential involvement of CD47 and SIRPalpha in COVID-19 pathology. Our data should encourage other research groups to consider the potential relevance of the CD47/ SIRPalpha axis in their COVID-19 research.
A high incidence of thromboembolic events associated with high mortality has been reported in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections with respiratory failure. The present study characterized post-transcriptional gene regulation by global microRNA (miRNA) expression in relation to activated coagulation and inflammation in 21 critically ill SARS-CoV-2 patients. The cohort consisted of patients with moderate respiratory failure (n = 11) and severe respiratory failure (n = 10) at an acute stage (day 0–3) and in the later course of the disease (>7 days). All patients needed supplemental oxygen and severe patients were defined by the requirement of positive pressure ventilation (intubation). Levels of D-dimers, activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), C-reactive protein (CRP), and interleukin (IL)-6 were significantly higher in patients with severe compared with moderate respiratory failure. Concurrently, next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis demonstrated increased dysregulation of miRNA expression with progression of disease severity connected to extreme downregulation of miR-320a, miR-320b and miR-320c. Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (KEGG) pathway analysis revealed involvement in the Hippo signaling pathway, the transforming growth factor (TGF)-β signaling pathway and in the regulation of adherens junctions. The expression of all miR-320 family members was significantly correlated with CRP, IL-6, and D-dimer levels. In conclusion, our analysis underlines the importance of thromboembolic processes in patients with respiratory failure and emphasizes miRNA-320s as potential biomarkers for severe progressive SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Background: To test the effect of urological primary cancers (bladder, kidney, testis, upper tract, penile, urethral) on overall mortality (OM) after secondary prostate cancer (PCa). Methods: Within the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database, patients with urological primary cancers and concomitant secondary PCa (diagnosed 2004-2016) were identified and were matched in 1:4 fashion with primary PCa controls. OM was compared between secondary and primary PCa patients and stratified according to primary urological cancer type, as well as to time interval between primary urological cancer versus secondary PCa diagnoses. Results: We identified 5,987 patients with primary urological and secondary PCa (bladder, n = 3,287; kidney, n = 2,127; testis, n = 391; upper tract, n = 125; penile, n = 47; urethral, n = 10) versus 531,732 primary PCa patients. Except for small proportions of Gleason grade group and age at diagnosis, PCa characteristics between secondary and primary PCa were comparable. Conversely, proportions of secondary PCa patients which received radical prostatectomy were smaller (29.0 vs. 33.5%), while no local treatment rates were higher (34.2 vs. 26.3%). After 1:4 matching, secondary PCa patients exhibited worse OM than primary PCa patients, except for primary testis cancer. Here, no OM differences were recorded. Finally, subgroup analyses showed that the survival disadvantage of secondary PCa patients decreased with longer time interval since primary cancer diagnosis. Conclusions: After detailed matching for PCa characteristics, secondary PCa patients exhibit worse survival, except for testis cancer patients. The survival disadvantage is attenuated, when secondary PCa diagnosis is made after longer time interval, since primary urological cancer diagnosis.
Objective: To evaluate the prognostic impact of gastrointestinal involvement on the survival of children with Langerhans cell histiocytosis (GI-LCH) registered with the international clinical trials of the Histiocyte Society. Study design: This was a retrospective analysis of 2414 pediatric patients registered onto the consecutive trials DAL-HX 83, DAL-HX 90, LCH-I, LCH-II, and LCH-III. Results: Among the 1289 patients with single-system LCH, there was no single case confined to the GI tract; 114 of 1125 (10%) patients with multisystem LCH (MS-LCH) had GI-LCH at initial presentation. GI-LCH was significantly more common in children aged <2 years at diagnosis (13% vs 6% in those aged >2 years; P < .001) and in those with risk organ involvement (15% vs 6% in those without risk organ involvement; P < .001). The 5-year overall survival (OS) in patients without risk organ involvement was excellent irrespective of GI disease (98% vs 97% in patients with GI-LCH; P = .789). In patients with risk organ involvement, the 5-year OS was 51% in 70 patients with GI-LCH vs 72% in 394 patients without GI-LCH (P < .001). Conclusions: GI-LCH has an additive unfavorable prognostic impact in children with MS-LCH and risk organ involvement. The emerding need for more intensive or alternative treatments mandates prospective evaluation.
Objective: The term ‘precision medicine’ describes a rational treatment strategy tailored to one person that reverses or modifies the disease pathophysiology. In epilepsy, single case and small cohort reports document nascent precision medicine strategies in specific genetic epilepsies. The aim of this multicentre observational study was to investigate the deeper complexity of precision medicine in epilepsy. Methods: A systematic survey of patients with epilepsy with a molecular genetic diagnosis was conducted in six tertiary epilepsy centres including children and adults. A standardised questionnaire was used for data collection, including genetic findings and impact on clinical and therapeutic management. Results: We included 293 patients with genetic epilepsies, 137 children and 156 adults, 162 females and 131 males. Treatment changes were undertaken because of the genetic findings in 94 patients (32%), including rational precision medicine treatment and/or a treatment change prompted by the genetic diagnosis, but not directly related to known pathophysiological mechanisms. There was a rational precision medicine treatment for 56 patients (19%), and this was tried in 33/56 (59%) and was successful (ie, >50% seizure reduction) in 10/33 (30%) patients. In 73/293 (25%) patients there was a treatment change prompted by the genetic diagnosis, but not directly related to known pathophysiological mechanisms, and this was successful in 24/73 (33%). Significance: Our survey of clinical practice in specialised epilepsy centres shows high variability of clinical outcomes following the identification of a genetic cause for an epilepsy. Meaningful change in the treatment paradigm after genetic testing is not yet possible for many people with epilepsy. This systematic survey provides an overview of the current application of precision medicine in the epilepsies, and suggests the adoption of a more considered approach.
Abstract: Neurophysiological measures of preparation and attention are often atypical in ADHD. Still, replicated findings that these measures predict which patients improve after Neurofeedback (NF), reveal neurophysiological specificity, and reflect ADHD-severity are limited. Methods: We analyzed children’s preparatory (CNV) and attentional (Cue-P3) brain activity and behavioral performance during a cued Continuous Performance Task (CPT) before and after slow cortical potential (SCP)-NF or semi-active control treatment (electromyogram biofeedback). Mixed-effects models were performed with 103 participants at baseline and 77 were assessed for pre-post comparisons focusing on clinical outcome prediction, specific neurophysiological effects of NF, and associations with ADHD-severity. Results: Attentional and preparatory brain activity and performance were non-specifically reduced after treatment. Preparatory activity in the SCP-NF group increased with clinical improvement. Several performance and brain activity measures predicted non-specific treatment outcome. Conclusion: Specific neurophysiological effects after SCP-NF were limited to increased neural preparation associated with improvement on ADHD-subscales, but several performance and neurophysiological measures of attention predicted treatment outcome and reflected symptom severity in ADHD. The results may help to optimize treatment.
Selfish genetic elements that act as post-segregation distorters cause lethality in non-carrier individuals after fertilization. Two post-segregation distorters have been previously identified in Caenorhabditis elegans, the peel-1/zeel-1 and the sup-35/pha-1 elements. These elements seem to act as modification-rescue systems, also called toxin/antidote pairs. Here we show that the maternal-effect toxin/zygotic antidote pair sup-35/pha-1 is required for proper expression of apical junction (AJ) components in epithelia and that sup-35 toxicity increases when pathways that establish and maintain basal epithelial characteristics, die-1, elt-1, lin-26, and vab-10, are compromised. We demonstrate that pha-1(e2123) embryos, which lack the antidote, are defective in epidermal morphogenesis and frequently fail to elongate. Moreover, seam cells are frequently misshaped and mispositioned and cell bond tension is reduced in pha-1(e2123) embryos, suggesting altered tissue material properties in the epidermis. Several aspects of this phenotype can also be induced in wild-type embryos by exerting mechanical stress through uniaxial loading. Seam cell shape, tissue mechanics, and elongation can be restored in pha-1(e2123) embryos if expression of the AJ molecule DLG-1/Discs large is reduced. Thus, our experiments suggest that maternal-effect toxicity disrupts proper development of the epidermis which involves distinct transcriptional regulators and AJ components.
Background: This study aims to test the effect of the 10 most common nonurological primary cancers (skin, rectal, colon, lymphoma, leukemia, pancreas, stomach, esophagus, liver, lung) on overall mortality (OM) after secondary prostate cancer (PCa). Material and Methods: Within the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, patients with 10 most common primary cancers and concomitant secondary PCa (diagnosed 2004–2016) were identified and were matched in 1:4 fashion (age, year at diagnosis, race/ethnicity, treatment type, TNM stage) with primary PCa controls. OM was compared between secondary and primary PCa patients and was stratified according to primary cancer type, as well as according to time interval between primary cancer vs. secondary PCa diagnoses. Results: We identified 24,848 secondary PCa patients (skin, n = 3,871; rectal, n = 798; colon, n = 3,665; lymphoma, n = 2,583; leukemia, n = 1,102; pancreatic, n = 118; stomach, n = 361; esophagus, n = 219; liver, n = 160; lung, n = 1,328) vs. 531,732 primary PCa patients. Secondary PCa characteristics were less favorable than those of primary PCa patients (PSA and grade), and smaller proportions of secondary PCa patients received active treatment. After 1:4 matching, all secondary PCa exhibited worse OM than primary PCa patients. Finally, subgroup analyses showed that the survival disadvantage of secondary PCa patients decreased with longer time interval since primary cancer diagnosis and subsequent secondary PCa. Conclusion: Patients with secondary PCa are diagnosed with less favorable PSA and grade. Even after matching for PCa characteristics, secondary PCa patients still exhibit worse survival. However, the survival disadvantage is attenuated, when secondary PCa diagnosis is made after longer time interval, since primary cancer diagnosis.
1. Zusammenfassung
1.1. Zielsetzung
Die hier beschriebene Studie vergleicht die effektive Linsenposition (ELP), die Vorderkammertiefenveränderung und den korrigierten Fernvisus nach einer Kataraktoperation bei Patienten mit und ohne Pseudoexfoliationssyndrom (PEX-Syndrom). Bei Patienten mit einem koexistierenden PEX-Syndrom wird während der Kataraktoperation eine Zonulaschwächen bedingte Verlagerung und tiefere Positionierung der eingesetzten Intraokular-linse erwartet.
1.2. Design
Prospektiv, randomisiert.
1.3. Methoden
In dieser prospektiven Studie wurden 56 Augen von 56 konsekutiven Patienten mit PEX-Syndrom (n = 28) oder ohne PEX-Syndrom (n = 28) und klinisch signifikanter Katarakt eingeschlossen. Sämtlichen Patienten beider Gruppen wurde mittels Phakoemulsifikation eine einteilige Acryl-Hinterkammer-Intraokularlinse implantiert. Als primäre Zielparameter der Studie dienten die Vorderkammertiefe als Indikator für die postoperative axiale Position der IOL benannt als die effektive Linsenposition sowie der korrigierte Fernvisus.
1.4. Ergebnisse
Vor der Operation betrug die Vorderkammertiefe (VKT) 2,54 ± 0,42 mm in der PEX-Gruppe und 2,53 ± 0,38 mm in der Kontrollgruppe (p = 0,941). Postoperativ betrug die VKT 4,29 ± 0,71 mm in der PEX-Gruppe bzw. 4,33 ± 0,72 mm in der Normalgruppe (p = 0,533). Es gab keinen signifikanten Unterschied in Bezug auf die Veränderungen der VKT zwischen den Gruppen (PEX-Gruppe: 1,75 ± 0,74 mm, Kontrollgruppe: 1,81 ± 0,61 mm, p = 0,806) und dem korrigierten Fernvisus (DCVA) prä- (p = 0,469) sowie postoperativ (PEX-Gruppe: 0,11 ± 0,13 logMAR, Kontrollgruppe: 0,09 ± 0,17 logMAR, p = 0,245).
1.5. Schlussfolgerung
Die Kataraktoperation induzierten Veränderungen waren bei Patienten, die an einem PEX-Syndrom erkrankt waren, die gleichen, die auch bei Patienten ohne PEX-Syndrom zu beobachten waren. Die präoperative und postoperative Vorderkammertiefe, als Indikator für die ELP, zeigte zwischen PEX-Augen und gesunden Augen nach der Kataraktoperation keine signifikanten Unterschiede. Des Weiteren waren keine Unterschiede in Bezug auf den korrigierten Fernvisus zwischen beiden Gruppen zu beobachten. Demnach ist zu erwarten, dass eine Erkrankung am PEX-Syndrom bei einer durch einen erfahrenen Chirurgen durchgeführten Kataraktoperation nicht zu einer Verschlechterung des Visus oder einer tieferen Positionierung der eingesetzten Intraokularlinse führt.
Background: Patients with colorectal carcinoma and high-grade microsatellite instability (MSI-H) or deficiency in mismatch repair (dMMR) exceptionally respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). ICIs are more active in treatment-naïve patients than in patients with refractory MSI-H/dMMR metastatic colorectal cancer and even more active in patients with locally advanced tumors. Material and Methods: A 33-year-old male patient with Lynch syndrome was diagnosed with a locally advanced rectal cancer and refused standard neoadjuvant chemoradiation because of the potential harm of sexual dysfunction. MMR and microsatellite instability status were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and fragment length polymerase chain reaction followed by capillary electrophoresis. Results: After MSI-H/dMMR was confirmed, the patient was treated with ICIs (1 mg/kg ipilimumab at day 1 and 3 mg/kg nivolumab at day 1 and 15). A complete clinical response was documented at day 21 after start of treatment. The patient underwent a total mesorectal excision at day 30. In the extirpated tissue, a complete pathological response was confirmed. Conclusion: In MSI-H/dMMR locally advanced rectal cancer short-course ICI treatment is highly effective and may be discussed in patients with dMMR locally advanced rectal cancer.
Background: To analyze postoperative, in-hospital, complication rates in patients with organ transplantation before radical prostatectomy (RP). Methods: From National Inpatient Sample (NIS) database (2000–2015) prostate cancer patients treated with RP were abstracted and stratified according to prior organ transplant versus nontransplant. Multivariable logistic regression models predicted in-hospital complications. Results: Of all eligible 202,419 RP patients, 216 (0.1%) underwent RP after prior organ transplantation. Transplant RP patients exhibited higher proportions of Charlson comorbidity index ≥2 (13.0% vs. 3.0%), obesity (9.3% vs. 5.6%, both p < 0.05), versus to nontransplant RP. Of transplant RP patients, 96 underwent kidney (44.4%), 44 heart (20.4%), 40 liver (18.5%), 30 (13.9%) bone marrow, <11 lung (<5%), and <11 pancreatic (<5%) transplantation before RP. Within transplant RP patients, rates of lymph node dissection ranged from 37.5% (kidney transplant) to 60.0% (bone marrow transplant, p < 0.01) versus 51% in nontransplant patients. Regarding in-hospital complications, transplant patients more frequently exhibited, diabetic (31.5% vs. 11.6%, p < 0.001), major (7.9% vs. 2.9%) cardiac complications (3.2% vs. 1.2%, p = 0.01), and acute kidney failure (5.1% vs. 0.9%, p < 0.001), versus nontransplant RP. In multivariable logistic regression models, transplant RP patients were at higher risk of acute kidney failure (odds ratio [OR]: 4.83), diabetic (OR: 2.81), major (OR: 2.39), intraoperative (OR: 2.38), cardiac (OR: 2.16), transfusion (OR: 1.37), and overall complications (1.36, all p < 0.001). No in-hospital mortalities were recorded in transplant patients after RP. Conclusions: Of all transplants before RP, kidney ranks first. RP patients with prior transplantation have an increased risk of in-hospital complications. The highest risk, relative to nontransplant RP patients appears to acute kidney failure.
The majority of excitatory synapses terminating on cortical neurons are found on dendritic spines. The geometry of spines, in particular the size of the spine head, tightly correlates with the strength of the excitatory synapse formed with the spine. Under conditions of synaptic plasticity, spine geometry may change, reflecting functional adaptations. Since the cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) has been shown to influence synaptic transmission as well as Hebbian and homeostatic forms of synaptic plasticity, we speculated that TNF-deficiency may cause concomitant structural changes at the level of dendritic spines. To address this question, we analyzed spine density and spine head area of Alexa568-filled granule cells in the dentate gyrus of adult C57BL/6J and TNF-deficient (TNF-KO) mice. Tissue sections were double-stained for the actin-modulating and plasticity-related protein synaptopodin (SP), a molecular marker for strong and stable spines. Dendritic segments of TNF-deficient granule cells exhibited ∼20% fewer spines in the outer molecular layer of the dentate gyrus compared to controls, indicating a reduced afferent innervation. Of note, these segments also had larger spines containing larger SP-clusters. This pattern of changes is strikingly similar to the one seen after denervation-associated spine loss following experimental entorhinal denervation of granule cells: Denervated granule cells increase the SP-content and strength of their remaining spines to homeostatically compensate for those that were lost. Our data suggest a similar compensatory mechanism in TNF-deficient granule cells in response to a reduction in their afferent innervation.
Aim: It can be challenging to distinguish COVID-19 in children from other common infections. We set out to determine the rate at which children consulting a primary care paediatrician with an acute infection are infected with SARS-CoV-2 and to compare distinct findings. Method: In seven out-patient clinics, children aged 0–13 years with any new respiratory or gastrointestinal symptoms and presumed infection were invited to be tested for SARS-CoV-2. Factors that were correlated with testing positive were determined. Samples were collected from 25 January 2021 to 01 April 2021. Results: Seven hundred and eighty-three children participated in the study (median age 3 years and 0 months, range 1 month to 12 years and 11 months). Three hundred and fifty-eight were female (45.7%). SARS-CoV-2 RNA was detected in 19 (2.4%). The most common symptoms in children with as well as without detectable SARS-CoV-2 RNA were rhinitis, fever and cough. Known recent exposure to a case of COVID-19 was significantly correlated with testing positive, but symptoms or clinical findings were not. Conclusion: COVID-19 among the children with symptoms of an acute infection was uncommon, and the clinical presentation did not differ significantly between children with and without evidence of an infection with SARS-CoV-2.
Introduction: Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-based gene therapy for haemophilia presents a challenge to the existing structure of haemophilia centres and requires a rethink of current collaboration and information exchange with the aim of ensuring a system that is fit-for-purpose for advanced therapies to maximise benefits and minimise risks. In Europe, a certification process based on the number of patients and facilities is offered to the haemophilia centres by European Haemophilia Network (EUHANET). Aim and methods: This joint European Association for Haemophilia and Allied Disorders (EAHAD) and European Haemophilia Consortium (EHC) publication describes criteria for centres participating in gene therapy care that require a reassessment of the infrastructure of comprehensive care and provides an outlook on how these criteria can be implemented in the future work of haemophilia centres. Results: The core definition of a haemophilia treatment centre remains, but additional roles could be implemented. A modifiable ‘hub-and-spoke’ model addresses all aspects associated with gene therapy, including preparation and administration of the gene therapy product, determination of coagulation and immunological parameters, joint.
Introduction: Over the last decade, multiple clinical trials demonstrated improved survival after chemotherapy for metastatic prostate cancer (mPCa). However, real-world data validating this effect within large-scale epidemiological data sets are scarce. We addressed this void. Materials and Methods: Men with de novo mPCa were identified and systemic chemotherapy status was ascertained within the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database (2004–2016). Patients were divided between historical (2004–2013) versus contemporary (2014–2016). Chemotherapy rates were plotted over time. Kaplan–Meier plots and Cox regression models with additional multivariable adjustments addressed overall and cancer-specific mortality. All tests were repeated in propensity-matched analyses. Results: Overall, 19,913 patients had de novo mPCa between 2004 and 2016. Of those, 1838 patients received chemotherapy. Of 1838 chemotherapy-exposed patients, 903 were historical, whereas 905 were contemporary. Chemotherapy rates increased from 5% to 25% over time. Median overall survival was not reached in contemporary patients versus was 24 months in historical patients (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.55, p < 0.001). After propensity score matching and additional multivariable adjustment (age, prostate-specific antigen, GGG, cT-stage, cN-stage, cM-stage, and local treatment) a HR of 0.55 (p < 0.001) was recorded. Analyses were repeated for cancer-specific mortality after adjustment for other cause mortality in competing risks regression models and recorded virtually the same findings before and after propensity score matching (HR: 0.55, p < 0.001). Conclusions: In mPCa patients, chemotherapy rates increased over time. A concomitant increase in survival was also recorded.
Purpose: To evaluate the impact of testing asymptomatic cancer patients, we analyzed all tests for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) before and during radiotherapy at a tertiary cancer center throughout the second wave of the pandemic in Germany. Methods: Results of all real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests for SARS-CoV 2 performed at our radio-oncology department between 13 October 2020 and 11 March 2021 were included. Clinical data and anamnestic information at the time of testing were documented and examined for (i) the presence of COVID-19-related symptoms and (ii) virus-related anamnesis (high-risk [prior positive test or contact to a positive tested person within the last 14 days] or low-risk [inconspicuous anamnesis within the last 14 days]). Results: A total of 1056 SARS-CoV 2 tests in 543 patients were analyzed. Of those, 1015 tests were performed in asymptomatic patients and 41 tests in patients with COVID-19-associated symptoms. Two of 940 (0.2%) tests in asymptomatic patients with low-risk anamnesis and three of 75 (4.0%) tests in asymptomatic patients with high-risk anamnesis showed a positive result. For symptomatic patients, SARS-CoV 2 was detected in three of 36 (8.3%) low-risk and three of five (60.0%) high-risk tests. Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study evaluating the correlation between individual risk factors and positivity rates of SARS-CoV 2 tests in cancer patients. The data demonstrate that clinical and anamnestic assessment is a simple and effective measure to distinctly increase SARS-CoV 2 test efficiency. This might enable cancer centers to adjust test strategies in asymptomatic patients, especially when test resources are scarce.
Interpretation bias and dysfunctional social assumptions are proposed to play a pivotal role in the development and maintenance of social phobia (SP), especially in youth. In this study, we aimed to investigate disorder-specific implicit assumptions of rejection and implicit interpretation bias in youth with severe, chronic SP and healthy controls (CG). Twenty-seven youth with SP in inpatient/day-care treatment (M age = 15.6 years, 74% female) and 24 healthy controls (M age = 15.7 years, 54% female) were included. The Implicit Association Test (IAT) and the Affect Misattribution Procedure (AMP) were completed to assess implicit assumptions and interpretation bias related to the processing of social and affective stimuli. No group differences were observed for the IAT controlling for depressive symptoms in the analyses. However, group differences were found regarding interpretation bias (p = .017, η2p = .137). Correlations between implicit scores and explicit questionnaire results were medium to large in the SP group (r =|.28| to |.54|, pall ≤ .05), but lower in the control group (r =|.04| to |.46|, pall ≤ .05). Our results confirm the finding of an interpretation bias in youth SP, especially regarding the implicit processing of faces, whereas implicit dysfunctional social assumptions of being rejected do not seem to be specific for SP. Future research should investigate the causal relationship of assumptions/interpretation bias and SP.