3,605 research outputs found
GloPID-R report on Chikungunya, O\u27nyong-nyong and Mayaro virus, part I: Biological diagnostics
Anticancer kinase inhibitors impair intracellular viral trafficking and exert broad-spectrum antiviral effects
Therapeutic administration of a recombinant human monoclonal antibody reduces the severity of chikungunya virus disease in rhesus macaques
Antigen-specific antibody Fc glycosylation enhances humoral immunity via the recruitment of complement
A single-dose live-attenuated vaccine prevents Zika virus pregnancy transmission and testis damage
Vaccine-induced protection of rhesus macaques against plasma viremia after intradermal infection with a European lineage 1 strain of West Nile virus
The 43GHz SiO maser in the circumstellar envelope of the AGB star R Cassiopeiae
We present multi-epoch, total intensity, high-resolution images of 43GHz,
v=1, J=1-0 SiO maser emission toward the Mira variable R Cas. In total we have
23 epochs of data for R Cas at approximate monthly intervals over an optical
pulsation phase range from 0.158 to 1.78. These maps show a ring-like
distribution of the maser features in a shell, which is assumed to be centred
on the star at a radius of 1.6 to 2.3 times the stellar radii. It is clear from
these images that the maser emission is significantly extended around the star.
At some epochs a faint outer arc can be seen at 2.2 stellar radii. The
intensity of the emission waxes and wanes during the stellar phase. Some maser
features are seen infalling as well as outflowing. We have made initial
comparisons of our data with models by Gray et. al. (2009).Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
Chikungunya viruses that escape monoclonal antibody therapy are clinically attenuated, stable, and not purified in mosquitoes
The PML-RAR alpha transcript in long-term follow-up of acute promyelocytic leukemia patients
Background and Objectives. Detection of PML-RAR alpha transcripts by RT-PCR is now established as a rapid and sensitive method for diagnosis of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), Although the majority of patients in longterm clinical remission are negative by consecutive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assays, negative tests are still observed in patients who ultimately relapse. Conversion from negative to positive PCR has been observed after consolidation and found to be a much stronger predictor of relapse. This study reports on 47 APL patients to determine the correlation between minimal residual disease (MRD) status and clinical outcome in our cohort of patients. Design and Methods. The presence of PML-RAR alpha t transcripts was investigated in 47 APL patients (37 adults and 10 children) using a semi-nested reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction to evaluate the prognostic value of RT-PCR tests. Results. All patients achieved complete clinical remission (CCR) following induction treatment with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and chemotherapy (CHT) or ATRA alone. Patients were followed up between 2 and 117.6 months (median: 37 months). Relapses occurred in 11 patients (9 adults and 2 children) between 11.4 and 19 months after diagnosis (median: 15.1 months) while 36 patients (28 adults and 8 children) remained in CCR, Seventy-five percent of patients carried the PML-RARa long isoform (bcr 1/2) which also predominated among the relapsed cases (9 of 11) but did not associate with any adverse outcome (p = 0.37), For the purpose of this analysis, minimal residual disease tests were clustered into four time-intervals: 0-2 months, 3-5 months, 5-9 months and 10-24 months. Interpretation and Conclusions. Children showed persisting disease for longer than adults during the first 2 months of treatment, At 2 months, 10 (50%) of 20 patients who remained in CCR and 4 (80%) of 5 patients who subsequently relapsed were positive. Patients who remained in CCR had repeatedly negative results beyond 5.5 months from diagnosis. A positive MRD test preceded relapse in 3 of 4 tested patients. The ability of a negative test to predict CCR (predictive negative value, PNV) was greater after 6 months (> 83%), while the ability of a positive test to predict relapse (predictive positive value, PPV) was most valuable only beyond 10 months (100%). This study (i) highlights the prognostic value of RT-PCR monitoring after treatment of APL patients but only from the end of treatment, (ii) shows an association between conversion to a positive test and relapse and (iii) suggests that PCR assessments should be carried out at 3-month intervals to provide a more accurate prediction of hematologic relapses but only after the end of treatment, (C) 2001, Ferrata Storti Foundatio
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