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Κυριακή 22 Μαΐου 2022

Supporting the Art: Medication Adherence Patterns in Persons Prescribed Ingestible Sensor-enabled Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis to Prevent HIV Infection

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Abstract
Background
Timely, accurate adherence data may support oral PrEP success and inform prophylaxis choice. We evaluated an FDA-approved digital health feedback system (DHFS) with ingestible-sensor-enabled (IS) tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate plus emtricitabine (Truvada®) in persons starting oral PrEP.
Methods
HIV-negative adults were prescribed IS-Truvada® with DHFS for 12 weeks to observe medication taking behavior. Baseline demographics, urine toxicology and self-report questionnaires were obtained. Positive detection accuracy and adverse events were computed as percentages, with Kaplan Meier Estimate for persistence-of-use. In participants persisting ≥ 28 days, adherence patterns (taking and timing) were analyzed and mixed-effects logistic regression modelled characteristics associated with treatment adherence.
Results
Seventy-one participants enrolled, mean age 37.6 years (range 18-69), 90.1% male, 77.5% white, 33.8% Hispanic, 95.8% housed and 74.6% employed. Sixty-three participants (88.7%) persisted ≥28 days, generating 4987 observation days, average 79.2 (29-105). Total confirmed doses were 86.2% (CI95 82.5, 89.4), decreasing over time, OR 0.899 (CI95 0.876, 0.923) per week, p < 0.001; 79.4% (CI95 66.7%, 87.3%) of participants had ≥80% adherence. Pattern analysis showed days without confirmed doses clustered (p = 0.003); regular dose timing was higher among participants with ≥80% confirmed doses (0.828, CI95 0.796 to 0.859) than among those with <80% (0.542, CI95 0.405 to 0.679) p < 0.001. In multi-predictor models, better adherence was associated with older age, OR 1.060 (CI95 1.033, 1.091) per year, p < 0.001; negative vs positive methamphetamine screen, OR 5.051 (CI95 2.252, 11.494), p < 0.001.
Conclusions
DHFS with IS-Truvada® distinguished adherent persons from those potentially at risk of prophylactic failure. Ongoing methamphetamine substance use may impact oral PrEP success.
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Πέμπτη 19 Μαΐου 2022

Frequency and distribution of H1N1 influenza A viruses with oseltamivir‐resistant mutations worldwide before and after the 2009 pandemic

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

Abstract

H1N1 influenza has brought serious threats to people's health and a high socio-economic burden to society. Oseltamivir, a kind of neuraminidase (NA) inhibitor, is the second-generation specific drug that is broadly used currently. However, H1N1 influenza viruses have exhibited oseltamivir resistance in the past decades, which might be a hidden danger. To understand the frequency and distribution laws of oseltamivir-resistant viruses, we conducted a thorough and deep analysis of the available NA protein sequences of H1N1 influenza viruses worldwide from 1918 to 2020. The differences and similarities before and after 2009 were also considered since the dominant viruses changed in this period. Results showed that 3.76% of H1N1 viruses harbored oseltamivir resistance currently. Among various significative mutations, H274Y had the highest frequency of 3.30%, while the frequencies of the other mutations were far below this whether before or after 2009. The oseltam ivir resistance was mainly found in three hosts, human, swine, and avian. Different mutation sites could exhibit different distributions in each host. Our results showed that the resistance level reached a peak during the 2007-2008 influenza season and then quickly decreased in 2009. The resistance also displayed a global distribution. The densely populated countries usually had a high resistance level. However, frequent significative mutations were also found in some small countries. Our findings indicated the necessity of monitoring oseltamivir resistance around the world. The study could provide a unique perspective towards the cognition of viruses and facilitate the future study of both pandemic and drug development.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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High dose chemoradiotherapy increases chance of organ preservation with satisfactory functional outcome for rectal cancer

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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High dose chemoradiotherapy offers a curative chance for patients with rectal cancer that are unfit or unwilling to undergo surgical resection, yet its long-term survival and functional outcomes have been rare...
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PD-L1 expression in 117 sinonasal mucosal melanomas and its association with clinical outcome

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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Publication date: Available online 18 May 2022

Source: Annals of Diagnostic Pathology

Author(s): Lining Wang, Honggang Liu

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Posterior tibial artery flap versus radial forearm flap in oral cavity reconstruction and donor site morbidity

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
The repair of soft tissue defects after oral cavity cancer resection is challenging. The aim of this study was to compare the outcomes and donor site morbidity of the radial forearm free flap (RFF) and posterior tibial artery perforator flap (PTAF) for oral cavity reconstruction after cancer ablation. All patients who underwent oral cavity reconstruction with a RFF or PTAF between January 2017 and December 2019 were included retrospectively in this study. All flaps were harvested with a long adipofascial extension. (Source: International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery)
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Τετάρτη 18 Μαΐου 2022

Sparstolonin B inhibits pancreatic adenocarcinoma through the NF-κB signaling pathway

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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Publication date: Available online 18 May 2022

Source: Experimental Cell Research

Author(s): Yang Lyu, Bowen Duan, Ziming Liu, Fan Yang, Chen Chen, Xuejiao Jiang, Xiang Liu

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Efficacy and safety of Lenzumestrocel (Neuronata-R® inj.) in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALSUMMIT study): study protocol for a multicentre, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, sham procedure-controlled, phase III trial

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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A single cycle (two repeated treatments) with intrathecal autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs, 26-day interval) showed safety and provided therapeutic benefit lasting 6 months in pat...
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High flow nasal cannula in the management of obstructive sleep Apnoea postoperatively. Is flow a new alternative to positive pressure?

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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Publication date: Available online 17 May 2022

Source: American Journal of Otolaryngology

Author(s): Abhijit S. Nair, Antonio M. Esquinas

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Magnetic resonance imaging assessment of juvenile idiopathic arthritis using OMERACT and EuroTMjoint classifications

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
This retrospective case –control study compared inflammatory and structural damage in the temporomandibular joint of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and its subtypes and healthy patients using the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Clinical Trials (OMERACT) and EuroTMjoint classifications. Correlations be tween the scores of the two classifications and time of diagnosis were evaluated. Twenty-nine JIA patients and 48 age-matched healthy participants were examined. TMJ images on each side were considered individually. (Source: International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery)
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Machine Learning Based Forecast of Dengue Fever in Brazilian Cities using Epidemiological and Meteorological Variables

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
Abstract
Dengue is a serious public health concern in Brazil and globally. In the absence of a universal vaccine or specific treatments, prevention relies on vector control and disease surveillance. Accurate and early forecasts can help reduce the spread of the disease. In this study, we develop a model to predict monthly dengue cases in Brazilian cities one month ahead from 2007-2019. We compare different machine learning algorithms and feature selection methods using epidemiological and meteorological variables. We find that different models work best in different cities, and a random forests model trained on monthly dengue cases performs best overall. It produces lower errors than a seasonal naïve baseline model, gradient boosting regression, feed-forward neural network, and support vector regression. For each city, we compute the mean absolute error between predictions and true monthly dengue cases on the test set. For the median city, the error is 1 2.2 cases. This error is reduced to 11.9 when selecting the optimal combination of algorithm and input features for each city individually. Machine learning and especially decision tree ensemble models may contribute to dengue surveillance in Brazil, as they produce low out-of-sample prediction errors for a geographically diverse set of cities.
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Τρίτη 17 Μαΐου 2022

Oral swabs tested with Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra for diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in children: a diagnostic accuracy study

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
Abstract
Background
Microbiological diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis may be difficult. Oral swabs are a potential non-invasive alternative to sputum for diagnosis.
Methods
A prospective diagnostic accuracy study of oral swabs (buccal and tongue) for pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) diagnosis in children (aged ≤15 years) in two South African hospital sites. Children with cough of any duration and either: a positive tuberculin skin test, TB contact, loss of weight or chest X-ray suggestive of PTB were enrolled. Two induced sputum specimens were tested with Xpert MTB/RIF (or Ultra) and liquid culture. Oral swabs were taken preceding sputum, frozen and later tested with Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra. Children were classified as microbiologically confirmed TB, Unconfirmed TB (received TB treatment) or unlikely TB according to NIH consensus definitions based on sputum microbiological results.
Results
Among 291 participants (median age 32 [IQR 14-73] months), 57 (20%) were living with HIV and 87 (30%) were malnourished. 90 (31%) had confirmed PTB (six (7%) with rifampicin-resistant TB), 157 (54%) unconfirmed PTB and 44 (15%) unlikely TB. One oral swab was obtained from 126 (43%) participants (96 tongue, 30 buccal) and two swabs from 165 (57%) (110 tongue, 55 buccal). Sensitivity was low; 22% (95% CI 15-32) for all swabs combined (confirmed PTB as reference), but specificity was high (100%, 95% CI 91-100). The highest sensitivity was 33% (15-58) among participants living with HIV. Overall yield was 6.9% with one oral swab, and 7.2% with two.
Conclusions
Ultra on oral swabs provides poor yield for microbiologic PTB confirmation in children.
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