891 resultados para Academic Affairs and Clinical Affairs
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With standard induction therapy between 50 to 85% of patients with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML) achieve Complete Remission (CR). We investigated whether any morphological feature of bone marrow (BM) plastic embedded biopsies could predict failure of therapy. We reviewed BM plastic embedded biopsies from 54 adult patients presenting with untreated AML. The main histologic parameters analysed were cellularity, dysmegakaryopoiesis (DysM), percentage of marrow blasts and fibrosis. CR was obtained in 34 of 49 treated patients (69%). The rate of CR was significantly lower in the group of patients presenting with DysM: CR was achieved in 54% of the 28 treated patients with DysM and in 90% of the 21 treated patients without DysM (p less than 0.02). Patients with DysM had a significantly lower blood count and bone marrow blasts at presentation. Median age was not significantly different in the 2 groups. Cellularity and fibrosis were not predictive. DysM may be the hallmark of an AML subgroup with distinct clinical behaviour and lower rate of CR with conventional therapy. DysM should be carefully looked for on BM marrow biopsies and aspirate from AML patients at diagnosis.
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Summary: Decrease in glutathione (GSH) levels was observed in cerebrospinal fluid, prefrontal cortex and post-mortem striatum of schizophrenia patients. Evidences suggest a defect in GSH synthesis at the levels of the rate-limiting synthesizing enzyme, glutamate cysteine ligase (GCL). Indeed, polymorphisms in the gene of the modifier subunit of GCL (GCLM) was shown to be associated with the disease in three different populations, GCLM gene expression is decreaséd in fibroblasts from patients and the increase in GCL activity induced by an oxidative stress is lower in patients' fibroblasts compared to controls. GSH being a major antioxydant and redox regulator, its presence is of high importance for protecting cells against oxidative stress. The aim of the present work was to use various substances to increase GSH levels by diverse strategies. Since the synthesizing enzyme GCL is defective, bypassing this enzyme was the first strategy we used. GSH ethyl ester (GSHEE), a membrane permeable analog of GSH, succeeded in replenishing GSH levels in cultured neurons and astrocytes previously depleted in GSH by L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of GCL. GSHEE also abolished dopamine-induced decrease of NMDA-mediated calcium response observed in BSO-treated neurons. y-Glutamylcysteine ethyl ester (GCSE), a membrane permeable analog of the product of GCL, increased GSH levels only in astrocytes. The second strategy was to boost the defective enzyme GCL. While quercetin (flavonoid) could increase GSH levels only in astrocytes, curcumin (polyphenol) and tertbutylhydroquinone (quinone) were successful in both neurons and astrocytes, via an increase in the gene expression of the two subunits of GCL and, consequently, an increase in the activity of the enzyme. However, FK506, an immunosupressant, was unefficient. Treating astrocytes from GCLM KO mice showed that the modulatory subunit is necessary for the action of the substances. Finally, since cysteine is the limiting precursor in the synthesis of GSH, we hypothesized that we could increase GSH levels by providing more of this precursor. N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC), a cysteine donor, was administered to schizophrenia patients, using adouble-blind and cross-over protocol. NAC significantly improved the mismatch negativity (MMN), a component of the auditory evoked potentials, thought to reflect selective current flowing through open, unblocked NMDA channels. Considering that NMDA function is reduced when GSH levels are low, increasing these levels with NAC could improve NMDA function as reflected by the improvement in the generation of the MMN. Résumé: Les taux de glutathion (GSH) dans le liquide céphalo-rachidien, le cortex préfrontal ainsi que le striatum post-mortem de patients schizophrènes, sont diminués. L'enzyme limitante dans la synthèse du GSH, la glutamyl-cysteine ligase (GCL), est défectueuse. En effet, des polymorphismes dans le gène de la sous-unité modulatrice de GCL (GCLM) sont associés à la maladie, l'expression du gène GCLM est diminuée dans les fibroblastes de patients et, lors d'un stress oxidative, l'augmentation de l'activité de GCL est plus faible chez les patients que chez les contrôles. Le GSH étant un important antioxydant et régulateur du status redox, sa présence est primordiale afin de protéger les cellules contre les stress oxydatifs. Au cours du présent travail, une variété de substances ont été utilisées dans le but d'augmenter les taux de GSH. Passer outre l'enzyme de synthèse GCL qui est défectueuse fut la première stratégie utilisée. L'éthylester de GSH (GSHEE), un analogue du GSH qui pénètre la membrane cellulaire, a augmenté les taux de GSH dans des neurones et des astrocytes déficitaires en GSH dû au L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), un inhibiteur du GCL. Dans ces neurones, le GSHEE a aussi aboli la diminution de la réponse NMDA, induite parla dopamine. L'éthyl-ester de y-glutamylcysteine (GCEE), un analogue du produit de la GCL qui pénètre la membrane cellulaire, a augmenté les taux de GSH seulement dans les astrocytes. La seconde stratégie était d'augmenter l'activité de l'enzyme GCL. Tandis que la quercétine (flavonoïde) n'a pu augmenter les taux de GSH que dans les astrocytes, la curcumin (polyphénol) et le tert-butylhydroquinone (quinone) furent efficaces dans les deux types de cellules, via une augmentation de l'expression des gènes des deux sous-unités de GCL et de l'activité de l'enzyme. Le FK506 (immunosupresseur) n' a démontré aucune efficacité. Traiter des astrocytes provenant de souris GCLM KO a permis d'observer que la sous-unité modulatoire est nécessaire à l'action des substances. Enfin, puisque la cysteine est le substrat limitant dans la synthèse du GSH, fournir plus de ce présurseur pourrait augmenter les taux de GSH. Nacétyl-cystéine (NAC), un donneur de cystéine, a été administrée à des schizophrènes, lors d'une étude en double-aveugle et cross-over. NAC a amélioré le mismatch negativity (MMN), un composant des potentials évoqués auditifs, qui reflète le courant circulant via les canaux NMDA. Puisque la fonctionnalité des R-NMDA est diminuée lorsque les taux de GSH sont bas, augmenter ces taux avec NAC pourrait améliorer la fonction des R-NMDA, réflété par une augmentation de l'amplitude du MMN.
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Increased peripheral and central nervous system cortisol levels have been reported in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and may reflect dysfunction of cerebral components of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. However, brain exposure to high cortisol concentrations may also accelerate disease progression and cognitive decline. The objectives of this study were to investigate whether HPA-axis dysregulation occurs at early clinical stages of AD and whether plasma and CSF cortisol levels are associated with clinical disease progression. Morning plasma and CSF cortisol concentrations were obtained from the subjects with AD dementia, mild cognitive impairment of AD type (MCI-AD), MCI of other type (MCI-O), and controls with normal cognition included in a multicenter study from the German Dementia Competence Network. A clinical and neuropsychological follow-up was performed in a subgroup of participants with MCI-AD, MCI-O, and AD dementia. CSF cortisol concentrations were increased in the subjects with AD dementia or MCI-AD compared with subjects with MCI-O or normal cognition. After controlling for possible confounders including CSF measures of amyloid beta1-42 and total tau, higher baseline CSF cortisol levels were associated with faster clinical worsening and cognitive decline in MCI-AD. The findings suggest that HPA-axis dysregulation occurs at the MCI stage of AD and may accelerate disease progression and cognitive decline.
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Although tumor heterogeneity is widely accepted, the existence of cancer stem cells (CSCs) and their proposed role in tumor maintenance has always been challenged and remains a matter of debate. Recently, a path-breaking chapter was added to this saga when three independent groups reported the in vivo existence of CSCs in brain, skin and intestinal tumors using lineage-tracing and thus strengthens the CSC concept; even though certain fundamental caveats are always associated with lineage-tracing approach. In principle, the CSC hypothesis proposes that similar to normal stem cells, CSCs maintain self renewal and multilineage differentiation property and are found at the central echelon of cellular hierarchy present within tumors. However, these cells differ from their normal counterpart by maintaining their malignant potential, alteration of genomic integrity, epigenetic identity and the expression of specific surface protein profiles. As CSCs are highly resistant to chemotherapeutics, they are thought to be a crucial factor involved in tumor relapse and superficially appear as the ultimate therapeutic target. However, even that is not the end; further complication is attributed by reports of bidirectional regeneration mechanism for CSCs, one from their self-renewal capability and another from the recently proposed concept of dynamic equilibrium between CSCs and non-CSCs via their interconversion. This phenomenon has currently added a new layer of complexity in understanding the biology of tumor heterogeneity. In-spite of its associated controversies, this area has rapidly emerged as the center of attention for researchers and clinicians, because of the conceptual framework it provides towards devising new therapies.
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BACKGROUND: Analyses of brain responses to external stimuli are typically based on the means computed across conditions. However in many cognitive and clinical applications, taking into account their variability across trials has turned out to be statistically more sensitive than comparing their means. NEW METHOD: In this study we present a novel implementation of a single-trial topographic analysis (STTA) for discriminating auditory evoked potentials at predefined time-windows. This analysis has been previously introduced for extracting spatio-temporal features at the level of the whole neural response. Adapting the STTA on specific time windows is an essential step for comparing its performance to other time-window based algorithms. RESULTS: We analyzed responses to standard vs. deviant sounds and showed that the new implementation of the STTA gives above-chance decoding results in all subjects (in comparison to 7 out of 11 with the original method). In comatose patients, the improvement of the decoding performance was even more pronounced than in healthy controls and doubled the number of significant results. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHOD(S): We compared the results obtained with the new STTA to those based on a logistic regression in healthy controls and patients. We showed that the first of these two comparisons provided a better performance of the logistic regression; however only the new STTA provided significant results in comatose patients at group level. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide quantitative evidence that a systematic investigation of the accuracy of established methods in normal and clinical population is an essential step for optimizing decoding performance.
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with specific ANA, in particular of the IgG3 isotype, had significantly more severe biochemical and histological disease compared with those who were seronegative. None of the controls was positive.Conclusions: Disease specific ANA are present in the majority of patients with PBC when investigated at the level of immunoglobulin isotype. PBC specific ANA, in particular of the IgG3 isotype, are associated with a more severe disease course, possibly reflecting the peculiar ability of this isotype to engage mediators of damage.
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AIM: To provide insight into cancer registration coverage, data access and use in Europe. This contributes to data and infrastructure harmonisation and will foster a more prominent role of cancer registries (CRs) within public health, clinical policy and cancer research, whether within or outside the European Research Area. METHODS: During 2010-12 an extensive survey of cancer registration practices and data use was conducted among 161 population-based CRs across Europe. Responding registries (66%) operated in 33 countries, including 23 with national coverage. RESULTS: Population-based oncological surveillance started during the 1940-50s in the northwest of Europe and from the 1970s to 1990s in other regions. The European Union (EU) protection regulations affected data access, especially in Germany and France, but less in the Netherlands or Belgium. Regular reports were produced by CRs on incidence rates (95%), survival (60%) and stage for selected tumours (80%). Evaluation of cancer control and quality of care remained modest except in a few dedicated CRs. Variables evaluated were support of clinical audits, monitoring adherence to clinical guidelines, improvement of cancer care and evaluation of mass cancer screening. Evaluation of diagnostic imaging tools was only occasional. CONCLUSION: Most population-based CRs are well equipped for strengthening cancer surveillance across Europe. Data quality and intensity of use depend on the role the cancer registry plays in the politico, oncomedical and public health setting within the country. Standard registration methodology could therefore not be translated to equivalent advances in cancer prevention and mass screening, quality of care, translational research of prognosis and survivorship across Europe. Further European collaboration remains essential to ensure access to data and comparability of the results.
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The age of erythrocyte concentrates (EC) in transfusion medicine and the adverse outcomes when transfusing long-term-stored EC are highly controversial issues. Whereas the definition of a short-term-stored EC or a long-term-stored EC is unclear in clinical trials, data based on in vitro storage assays can help defining a limit in addition of the expiration date. The present review merges together these data in order to highlight an EC age cut-off and points out potential misleading consideration. The analysis of in vitro data highlights the presence of reversible and irreversible storage lesions and demonstrates that red blood cells (RBC) exhibit two limits during storage: one around 2 weeks and another one around 4 weeks of storage. Of particular importance, the first lesions to appear, i.e. the reversible ones, are per se reversible once transfused, whereas the irreversible lesions are not. In clinical trials, the EC age cut-off for short-term storage is in general fewer than 14 days (11 ± 4 days) and more disperse for long-term-stored EC (17 ± 13 days), regardless the clinical outcomes. Taking together, EC age cut-off in clinical trials does not totally fall into line of in vitro aging data, whereas it is the key criteria in clinical studies. Long-term-stored EC considered in clinical trials are not probably old enough to answer the question: "Does transfusion of long-term-stored EC (older than 4 weeks) result in worse clinical outcomes?" Depending on ethical concerns and clinical practices, older EC than currently assayed in clinical trials should have to be considered. These two worlds trying to understand the aging of erythrocytes and the impact on patients do not seem to speak the same language.
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Background & Aims: Patients with cirrhosis develop abnormal hematologic indices (HI) from multiple factors, including hypersplenism. We aimed to analyze the sequence of events and determine whether abnormal HI has prog-nostic significance. Methods: We analyzed a database of 213 subjects with compensated cirrhosis without esopha-geal varices. Subjects were followed for approximately 9 years until the development of varices or variceal bleeding or completion of the study; 84 subjects developed varices. Abnormal HI was defined as anemia at baseline (hemoglo-bin,<13.5 g/dL for men and 11.5 g/dL for women), leuko-penia (white blood cell counts,<4000/mm 3 ), or thrombo-cytopenia (platelet counts, < 150,000/mm 3 ). The primary end points were death or transplant surgery. Results: Most subjects had thrombocytopenia at baseline. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed that leukopenia occurred by 30 months (95% confidence interval, 18.5-53.6), and anemia occurred by 39.6 months (95% confidence interval, 24.1-49.9). Baseline thrombocytopenia (P .0191) and leukope-nia (P.0383) were predictors of death or transplant, after adjusting for baseline hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG), and Child-Pugh scores. After a median of 5 years,a significant difference in death or transplant, mortality,and clinical decompensation was observed in patients who had leukopenia combined with thrombocytopenia at base- line compared with patients with normal HI (P < .0001). HVPG correlated with hemoglobin and white blood cell count (hemoglobin, r 0.35, P < .0001; white blood cell count, r 0.31, P < .0001). Conclusions: Thrombocy-topenia is the most common and first abnormal HI to occurin patients with cirrhosis, followed by leukopenia and anemia. A combination of leukopenia and thrombocytopenia at baselin predicted increased morbidity and mortality.
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Vertebral fracture assessments (VFAs) using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry increase vertebral fracture detection in clinical practice and are highly reproducible. Measures of reproducibility are dependent on the frequency and distribution of the event. The aim of this study was to compare 2 reproducibility measures, reliability and agreement, in VFA readings in both a population-based and a clinical cohort. We measured agreement and reliability by uniform kappa and Cohen's kappa for vertebral reading and fracture identification: 360 VFAs from a population-based cohort and 85 from a clinical cohort. In the population-based cohort, 12% of vertebrae were unreadable. Vertebral fracture prevalence ranged from 3% to 4%. Inter-reader and intrareader reliability with Cohen's kappa was fair to good (0.35-0.71 and 0.36-0.74, respectively), with good inter-reader and intrareader agreement by uniform kappa (0.74-0.98 and 0.76-0.99, respectively). In the clinical cohort, 15% of vertebrae were unreadable, and vertebral fracture prevalence ranged from 7.6% to 8.1%. Inter-reader reliability was moderate to good (0.43-0.71), and the agreement was good (0.68-0.91). In clinical situations, the levels of reproducibility measured by the 2 kappa statistics are concordant, so that either could be used to measure agreement and reliability. However, if events are rare, as in a population-based cohort, we recommend evaluating reproducibility using the uniform kappa, as Cohen's kappa may be less accurate.
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The emergence and pandemic spread of a new strain of influenza A (H1N1) virus in 2009 resulted in a serious alarm in clinical and public health services all over the world. One distinguishing feature of this new influenza pandemic was the different profile of hospitalized patients compared to those from traditional seasonal influenza infections. Our goal was to analyze sociodemographic and clinical factors associated to hospitalization following infection by influenza A(H1N1) virus. We report the results of a Spanish nationwide study with laboratory confirmed infection by the new pandemic virus in a case-control design based on hospitalized patients. The main risk factors for hospitalization of influenza A (H1N1) 2009 were determined to be obesity (BMI≥40, with an odds-ratio [OR] 14.27), hematological neoplasia (OR 10.71), chronic heart disease, COPD (OR 5.16) and neurological disease, among the clinical conditions, whereas low education level and some ethnic backgrounds (Gypsies and Amerinds) were the sociodemographic variables found associated to hospitalization. The presence of any clinical condition of moderate risk almost triples the risk of hospitalization (OR 2.88) and high risk conditions raise this value markedly (OR 6.43). The risk of hospitalization increased proportionally when for two (OR 2.08) or for three or more (OR 4.86) risk factors were simultaneously present in the same patient. These findings should be considered when a new influenza virus appears in the human population.
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PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Only 5% of the Alzheimer's cases are explained by genetic mutations, whereas the remaining 95% are sporadic. The pathophysiological mechanisms underlying sporadic Alzheimer's disease are not well understood, suggesting a complex multifactorial cause. This review summarizes the recent findings on research aiming to show how biomarkers can be used for revealing the underlying mechanisms of preclinical stage Alzheimer's disease and help in their diagnosis. RECENT FINDINGS: The undisputed successful publicly accessible repositories provide longitudinal brain images, clinical, genetic and proteomic information of Alzheimer's disease. By combining with increasingly sophisticated data analysis methods, it is a great opportunity for searching new biomarkers. Innovative studies validated theoretical models of disease progression demonstrating the sequential ordering of well-established biomarkers. Novel observations shed light on the interaction between biomarkers to confirm that disease progression is related to multiple pathological factors. A typical example is the tau-associated neuronal toxicity that can be additionally potentiated by amyloid β peptides. To increase further the complexity, studies report specific impact of common genetic variants that can be traced from childhood through middle age up to the symptomatic onset of Alzheimer's disease. SUMMARY: The discovery of efficient therapies to prevent the disease or modify the progression of disease requires a more thorough understanding of the underlying biological processes. Neuroimaging, genetic and proteomic biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease are critically discussed and proposed to be included in clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines.