823 research outputs found
Tissue-specific expression of a human Polymorphic Epithelial mucin (MUCI) in transgenic mice
The human MUC1 gene codes for the core protein of a mucin which is expressed by glandular epithelia and the carcinomas which develop from these tissues. The core protein is aberrantly glycosylated in cancers, and some antibodies show specificity in their reactions with the cancer-associated mucin, which also contains epitopes recognized by T-cells from breast and pancreatic cancer patients. For evaluating the potential use of mucin-reactive antibodies and mucin-based immunogens in cancer patients, a mouse model, expressing the MUC1 gene product PEM (polymorphic epithelial mucin) as a self antigen, would be extremely useful. To this end, we have developed transgenic mouse strains expressing the human MUC1 gene product in a tissue-specific manner. The TG4 mouse strain was established using a 40-kilobase fragment containing 4.5 kilobases of 5\u27 and 27 kilobases of 3\u27 flanking sequence. The TG18 strain was developed using a 10.6-kilobase SacII fragment from the 40-kilobase fragment; this fragment contained 1.6 kilobases of 5\u27 sequence and 1.9 kilobases of 3\u27 flanking sequence. Both strains showed tissue specificity of expression of the MUC1 gene, which was very similar to the profile of expression seen in human tissues. The antibody SM-3 is directed to a core protein epitope, which is selectively exposed in breast cancers and which shows a more restricted distribution on normal human tissues. It was established that the distribution of the SM-3 epitope of PEM in the tissues of the transgenic mice is similar to that seen in humans. The transgenic mouse strains described here should form the basis for the development of a preclinical model for the evaluation of PEM-based antigens and of antibodies directed to PEM in cancer therapy
Placental growth factor testing for suspected pre‐eclampsia: a cost‐effectiveness analysis
Objective
To calculate the cost‐effectiveness of implementing PlGF testing alongside a clinical management algorithm in maternity services in the UK, compared with current standard care.
Design
Cost‐effectiveness analysis.
Setting
Eleven maternity units participating in the PARROT stepped‐wedge cluster‐randomised controlled trial.
Population
Women presenting with suspected pre‐eclampsia between 20+0 and 36+6 weeks’ gestation.
Methods
Monte Carlo simulation utilising resource use data and maternal adverse outcomes.
Main outcome measures
Cost per maternal adverse outcome prevented.
Results
Clinical care with PlGF testing costs less than current standard practice and resulted in fewer maternal adverse outcomes. There is a total cost‐saving of UK£149 per patient tested, when including the cost of the test. This represents a potential cost‐saving of UK£2,891,196 each year across the NHS in England.
Conclusions
Clinical care with PlGF testing is associated with the potential for cost‐savings per participant tested when compared with current practice via a reduction in outpatient attendances, and improves maternal outcomes. This economic analysis supports a role for implementation of PlGF testing in antenatal services for the assessment of women with suspected pre‐eclampsia.
Tweetable abstract
Placental growth factor testing for suspected pre‐eclampsia is cost‐saving and improves maternal outcomes
Three keys to a shared vision of diagnostic assessment: an initiative in person-centered care from the Department of Health in the UK
Measures of outcome for stimulant trials: ACTTION recommendations and research agenda
BACKGROUND:
The development and approval of an efficacious pharmacotherapy for stimulant use disorders has been limited by the lack of a meaningful indicator of treatment success, other than sustained abstinence.
METHODS:
In March, 2015, a meeting sponsored by Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION) was convened to discuss the current state of the evidence regarding meaningful outcome measures in clinical trials for stimulant use disorders. Attendees included members of academia, funding and regulatory agencies, pharmaceutical companies, and healthcare organizations. The goal was to establish a research agenda for the development of a meaningful outcome measure that may be used as an endpoint in clinical trials for stimulant use disorders.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS:
Based on guidelines for the selection of clinical trial endpoints, the lessons learned from prior addiction clinical trials, and the process that led to identification of a meaningful indicator of treatment success for alcohol use disorders, several recommendations for future research were generated. These include a focus on the validation of patient reported outcome measures of functioning, the exploration of patterns of stimulant abstinence that may be associated with physical and/or psychosocial benefits, the role of urine testing for validating self-reported measures of stimulant abstinence, and the operational definitions for reduction-based measures in terms of frequency rather than quantity of stimulant use. These recommendations may be useful for secondary analyses of clinical trial data, and in the design of future clinical trials that may help establish a meaningful indicator of treatment success
Mineralogy and geochemistry of the Masa Valverde blind massive sulphide deposit, Iberian Pyrite Belt (Spain)
Masa Valverde is a blind, volcanic-hosted massive sulphide deposit recently discovered in the Spanish sector of the
Iberian Pyrite Belt (IPB). The deposit is more than 1 km long and is located at depths between 400 and 850 m, in direct
spatial association with a residual gravimetric anomaly. The ore body is concealed beneath Culm sedimentary rocks which
cover the westem extension of a Hercynian age anticline, a few kilometers west of an area where older massive sulphide
workings existed. The Masa Valverde deposit consists of two main ore bodies composed dominantly of massive and banded
pyrite which are hosted by a volcano-sedimentary sequence made up of felsic tuffs interlayered with shale, siliceous exhalite
and radiolarian chert. The abundance of sedimentary host rocks to the deposit is a feature shared by other large massive
sulphide deposits in the eastem sector of the IPB and is interpreted as significant with respect to the origin of the deposit (a
break in volcanic activity). The thickness of the upper massive sulphide orebody varies between a few meters and 70 m, and
it consists of lenses and blankets of massive sulphides with interbedded tuff and shale and occasionally stockwork zones.
The lower orebody is smaller and thinner than the upper one, but this may be due to incomplete drilling. Two types of
stockwork occur beneath the massive sulphide bodies, the more common type consists of irregular and anastomosing
sulphide veinlets and irregular blebs formed by replacement. Stockwork with cross-cutting, generally straight-sided, sulphide
veins is, by contrast, suggestive of formation by hydraulic fracturing. The mineralogy and alteration processes of the ore and
host rocks at Masa Valverde are analogous to those of other IPB massive sulphides
Investigating Factors that Influence Compensatory Mechanisms that Maintain Adult Drosophila Intestinal Homeostasis in the Absence of Intestinal Stem Cell Activity
Does a child’s language ability affect the correspondence between parent and teacher ratings of ADHD symptoms?
Background: Rating scales are often used to identify children with potential Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD), yet there are frequently discrepancies between informants which may be moderated by child
characteristics. The current study asked whether correspondence between parent and teacher ratings on the
Strengths and Weakness of ADHD symptoms and Normal behaviour scale (SWAN) varied systematically with child
language ability.
Method: Parent and teacher SWAN questionnaires were returned for 200 children (aged 61–81 months); 106 had
low language ability (LL) and 94 had typically developing language (TL). After exploring informant correspondence
(using Pearson correlation) and the discrepancy between raters, we report inter-class correlation coefficients, to
assess inter-rater reliability, and Cohen’s kappa, to assess agreement regarding possible ADHD caseness.
Results: Correlations between informant ratings on the SWAN were moderate. Children with LL were rated as
having increased inattention and hyperactivity relative to children with TL; teachers, however, rated children with LL
as having more inattention than parents. Inter-rater reliability of the SWAN was good and there were no systematic
differences between the LL and TL groups. Case agreement between parent and teachers was fair; this varied by
language group with poorer case agreement for children with LL.
Conclusion: Children’s language abilities affect the discrepancy between informant ratings of ADHD symptomatology
and the agreement between parents and teachers regarding potential ADHD caseness. The assessment of children’s
core language ability would be a beneficial addition to the ADHD diagnostic process.</p
Decision-making, cognitive distortions and alcohol use in adolescent problem and non-problem gamblers: an experimental study
In the psychological literature, many studies have investigated the neuropsychological and behavioral changes that occur developmentally during adolescence. These studies have consistently observed a deficit in the decision-making ability of children and adolescents. This deficit has been ascribed to incomplete brain development. The same deficit has also been observed in adult problem and pathological gamblers. However, to date, no study has examined decision-making in adolescents with and without gambling problems. Furthermore, no study has ever examined associations between problem gambling, decision-making, cognitive distortions and alcohol use in youth. To address these issues, 104 male adolescents participated in this study. They were equally divided in two groups, problem gamblers and non-problem gamblers, based on South Oaks Gambling Screen Revised for Adolescents scores. All participants performed the Iowa Gambling Task and completed the Gambling Related Cognitions Scale and the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. Adolescent problem gamblers displayed impaired decision-making, reported high cognitive distortions, and had more problematic alcohol use compared to non-problem gamblers. Strong correlations between problem gambling, alcohol use, and cognitive distortions were observed. Decision-making correlated with interpretative bias. This study demonstrated that adolescent problem gamblers appear to have the same psychological profile as adult problem gamblers and that gambling involvement can negatively impact on decision-making ability that, in adolescence, is still developing. The correlations between interpretative bias and decision-making suggested that the beliefs in the ability to influence gambling outcomes may facilitate decision-making impairment
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