Major differences in survival of men and women from infectious diseases and cancers have been highlighted by death rates from COVID-19 infections. In cancer, attention has been focussed on differences in gene expression from X chromosomes in men and women with a preponderance of genes involved in immune responses being expressed in women. Important findings have been that some of the genes are important epigenetic regulators that play fundamental roles in immune responses.Subject terms: Cancer epigenetics, OncologyOne of the striking features of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak has been the higher death rates in men even though the infection rates seem similar between men and women.1 Similar findings were reported from Wuhan where men had 2.4 times the death rate of women2 and in New York where press releases stated twice the death rate of men compared with women.3 Although men had higher rates of comorbidities, these differences were not considered sufficient to explain the higher death rates and other explanations have been sort. Women are considered to have stronger immune responses against infective diseases and a higher rate of autoimmune diseases, so this has questioned whether the lower death rate may have an immune basis.A sex bias is not only seen in infections, but also in cancers where a strong sex bias in survival from cancer is well documented.4,5 For example, women in Australia have approximately half the death rates from melanoma as males.6 A number of explanations have been proposed to account for these major differences in melanoma, such as higher sun exposure in males7 and higher mutation rates8 in melanoma from males. When stringent statistical analyses are carried out, however, female sex remains as the major contributor to longer survival.4Melanoma is not the only cancer to show improved survival in females and previous researchers have asked whether this may be due to differences in the sex chromosomes between male and females. In a mammoth study, Dunford and colleagues examined information in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) from 21 different tumour types from 4100 cancers.5 They found that 6 out of 783 X chromosome genes had loss-of-function mutations with tumour-suppressive function in males but not in females. There were no similar differences in 18,055 non-X autosomal genes. Importantly, four of the six genes were known epigenetic regulators, such as KDM6A (lysine-specific demethylase 6A), KDM5C (lysine-specific demethylase 5C), ATRX (Alpha thalassaemia/mental retardation syndrome X-linked) and DDX3X (DEAD-box helicase 3 X-linked).5These findings point to important differences in X chromosomes between the sexes. The Y chromosome codes mainly for genes that determine male sex, but X chromosomes are quite large and code for >800 genes many of which are involved in immune responses.9 To equalise the number of genes between the sexes, one of the X chromosomes in females undergoes inactivation (Xi) of its genes.10 The silencing process is, however, not perfect and between 10 and 20% of the genes on the X may be expressed in females depending on the tissue involved. It is probably of significance that failure to silence genes may be particularly high in activated lymphocytes.11 As a result of this phenomenon, females have double expression of many genes involved in immune responses compared with males. Biologists have speculated that this is an evolutionary mechanism to protect the species by enhancing immune responses in females against harmful infections.Analysis of data in the TCGA on 458 melanoma patients revealed that KDM6A expression was strongly related to improved survival from melanoma in female patients. ATRX had prognostic significance in both sexes. Analysis of another series of 678 patients with earlier melanoma referred to as the Leeds Melanoma Cohort confirmed the association with KDM6A expression and also identified KDM5C and DDX3X as being related to improved survival.12 Immune responses are known to be critical in survival from melanoma and the TCGA analysis allowed us to link high KDM6A to components of the immune system considered important in killing of melanoma. This was particularly so in the production of interferon γ in female patients which is a key cytokine needed by the immune system to kill cancer cells. Gene set analysis also showed downregulation of Myc and other oncogenic pathways that may have contributed to the improvement in survival.12These data add to a number of studies implicating KDM6A in immune responses against viral infections and in autoimmune diseases.13 At a molecular level, KDM6A is known to have an opposing role to EZH2 (enhancer of Zeste homologue 2) in the PRC2 complex in methylation of Lys 27 on H3 histone. This role may explain some of the effects of KDM6A on the immune system in that we previously reported that EZH2 was associated with the repression of several genes associated with antigen presentation and chemokines involved in T cell responses.14Although these studies are compelling in linking KDM6A to immune responses, it is still questionable whether it has a role in immune responses against COVID-19. If this was the case, we would expect that women being treated for severe COVID-19 infections in intensive care would have lower KDM6A expression than those with infections not requiring such care.15 We examined the RNA-seq data from blood samples of 102 COVID-19 patients. This included 38 women and 64 men, where 17 women and 34 men were admitted to intensive care unit. The analysis of KDM6A levels in the women showed that treatment in intensive care unit was associated with higher KDM6A expression ({"type":"entrez-geo","attrs":{"text":"GSE157103","term_id":"157103"}}GSE157103,15 data not shown). Although this was unexpected, it may indicate that KDM6A expression was linked to stronger responses causing higher inflammation in organs such as the lungs. No differences in KDM6A levels were detected in men irrespective of whether they were admitted to intensive care or not.Female patients with bi-allelic expression of KDM6A may induce the expression of interferon γ pathways which enhance anti-tumour immunity by recruiting immune modulatory cells (Fig. 1). These results point to the need for a better understanding of the role of X-linked genes in immune responses and whether EZH2-mediated suppression of immune modulatory genes have a role in infections as well as in cancer. In cancers and infections that have worst outcomes in males versus females, one approach might be to target (inhibit) the EZH2 epigenetic regulator that opposes KDM6A (Fig. 1). Another option may be to increase levels of KDM6A by administration of oestrogens. Oestrogen α receptors are expressed in practically all lymphocytes and were shown to physically interact with KDM6A to create a permissive chromatin state on endoplasmic reticulum (ER) targets such as C-X-C chemokine motif receptor 4.16 It was transactivated by ER to form a feed-forward loop. Administration of 17β-oestradiol has been suggested by others as treatment for COVID-19 infections.17Open in a separate windowFig. 1Proposed model of sex-biased role of the X-linked KDM6A gene in promoting immunity.Males harbour one X chromosome with no functional Y chromosome homologue. Hence, mutation in the X-linked epigenetic modifier KDM6A with tumour-suppressive or immunomodulatory role will probably lead to cancer or infection in males. Immune-related genes will be repressed by EZH2-mediated H3K27me3 deposition resulting in low KDM6A protein and immune evasion in male patients. In females, with two X chromosome, [one active (Xa) and one inactive (Xi)], a single mutation (m) in KDM6A is less likely to develop cancer or infections since another functional allele escapes X inactivation. Cells with high KDM6A level would be expected to demethylate H3K27me3 resulting in activation of the interferon γ pathway resulting in inactivation of natural killer (NK), dendritic or cytotoxic T cells to induce anti-tumour immunity and adaptive immunity against virus-infected cells.These studies have therefore raised many questions that require more detailed study to identify how the powerful survival benefits of the X-linked epigenetic regulators might be used to improve the therapeutic outcome in patients. 相似文献
Background Many breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening programmes were disrupted due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aimed to estimate the effects of five restart strategies after the disruption on required screening capacity and cancer burden.Methods Microsimulation models simulated five restart strategies for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening. The models estimated required screening capacity, cancer incidence, and cancer-specific mortality after a disruption of 6 months. The restart strategies varied in whether screens were caught up or not and, if so, immediately or delayed, and whether the upper age limit was increased.Results The disruption in screening programmes without catch-up of missed screens led to an increase of 2.0, 0.3, and 2.5 cancer deaths per 100 000 individuals in 10 years in breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer, respectively. Immediately catching-up missed screens minimised the impact of the disruption but required a surge in screening capacity. Delaying screening, but still offering all screening rounds gave the best balance between required capacity, incidence, and mortality.Conclusions Strategies with the smallest loss in health effects were also the most burdensome for the screening organisations. Which strategy is preferred depends on the organisation and available capacity in a country.Subject terms: Health policy, Population screening, Cancer screening, Cancer screening相似文献
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Little is known about microstructural development of cerebellar white matter in vivo. This study aimed to investigate developmental changes of the cerebellar peduncles in second- and third-trimester healthy fetuses using motion-corrected DTI and tractography.MATERIALS AND METHODS:3T data of 81 healthy fetuses were reviewed. Structural imaging consisted of multiplanar T2-single-shot sequences; DTI consisted of a series of 12-direction diffusion. A robust motion-tracked section-to-volume registration algorithm reconstructed images. ROI-based deterministic tractography was performed using anatomic landmarks described in postnatal tractography. Asymmetry was evaluated qualitatively with a perceived difference of >25% between sides. Linear regression evaluated gestational age as a predictor of tract volume, ADC, and fractional anisotropy.RESULTS:Twenty-four cases were excluded due to low-quality reconstructions. Fifty-eight fetuses with a median gestational age of 30.6 weeks (interquartile range, 7 weeks) were analyzed. The superior cerebellar peduncle was identified in 39 subjects (69%), and it was symmetric in 15 (38%). The middle cerebellar peduncle was identified in all subjects and appeared symmetric; in 13 subjects (22%), two distinct subcomponents were identified. The inferior cerebellar peduncle was not found in any subject. There was a significant increase in volume for the superior cerebellar peduncle and middle cerebellar peduncle (both, P < .05), an increase in fractional anisotropy (both, P < .001), and a decrease in ADC (both, P < .001) with gestational age. The middle cerebellar peduncle had higher volume (P < .001) and fractional anisotropy (P = .002) and lower ADC (P < .001) than the superior cerebellar peduncle after controlling for gestational age.CONCLUSIONS:A robust motion-tracked section-to-volume registration algorithm enabled deterministic tractography of the superior cerebellar peduncle and middle cerebellar peduncle in vivo and allowed characterization of developmental changes.In the second half of pregnancy, the cerebellum is growing rapidly and is extremely vulnerable.1 Despite the increasingly recognized association of antenatal and perinatal cerebellar injury with adverse motor and neurologic outcomes later in life,2-5 little is known about normal cerebellar developmental in the later part of gestation, in particular with regard to changes in microstructure. In fact, most existing fetal MR imaging data addresses primarily changes in cerebellar volume with gestational age (GA) or changes in volume and their association with specific diseases such as congenital heart disease.6-8In vivo evaluation of cerebellar microstructure using fetal MR imaging has been limited by the technical challenges related to imaging the gravid abdomen, particularly patient motion. However, data from ex vivo MR imaging studies are promising. For instance, Takahashi et al9,10 performed high-resolution ex vivo DTI of fetal specimens and demonstrated the feasibility of using tractography to outline the cerebellar peduncles prenatally. Even though tractography of the cerebellar peduncles has been sporadically reported in vivo in technical articles or general review articles on fetal DTI,11 the GA-related microstructural changes that occur in the cerebellar peduncles in the second half of pregnancy remain largely unexplored.Recent advances in hardware and software have improved fetal MR imaging substantially. The use of 3T magnets, which have been shown to be safe, results in improvement of the SNR and spatial resolution, which is advantageous to image the small structures of the fetal brain.12,13 In addition, postprocessing algorithms that enable reconstruction of motion-corrected fetal DTI data are increasingly available and have been used by several groups to characterize the development of the supratentorial white matter tracts in vivo.14-16 We hypothesize that fetal DTI performed at 3T and processed with a robust section-to-volume motion-correction and registration14 algorithm will enable tractography of the cerebellar peduncles in fetuses in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. We aimed to characterize fetal cerebellar tract microstructure and to investigate tract-specific developmental changes. 相似文献
In November 2017, the World Health Organization received initial reports of suspected diphtheria cases in camps established for displaced Rohingyas in Cox’s Bazar district, Bangladesh. By January 11, 2018, over 4,000 suspected cases of diphtheria and 30 deaths were reported. The Bangladesh government and partners implemented a diphtheria vaccination campaign in December 2017. Outbreak response staff reported anecdotal evidence of vaccine hesitancy. Our assessment aimed to understand vaccination barriers and opportunities to enhance vaccine demand among displaced Rohingyas in Bangladesh.
Methods
In January 2018, we conducted a qualitative assessment consisting of nine focus group discussions and 15 key informant interviews with displaced Rohingyas in three camps. Participants included mothers and fathers with under five-year-old children, community volunteers, majhis (camp leaders), Islamic religious leaders, traditional and spiritual healers, and teachers. We recruited participants using purposive sampling, and analyzed the data thematically.
Results
Across focus groups and in-depth interviews, trusted information sources cited by participants included religious leaders, elders, village doctors, pharmacists, majhis, and mothers trained by non-governmental organizations to educate caregivers. Treatment of diphtheria and measles was usually sought from multiple sources including traditional and spiritual healers, village doctors, pharmacies, and health clinics. Major barriers to vaccination included: various beliefs about vaccination causing people to become Christian; concerns about multiple vaccines being received on the same day; worries about vaccination side effects; and, lack of sensitivity to cultural gender norms at the vaccination sites.
Conclusion
Although vaccination was understood as an important intervention to prevent childhood diseases, participants reported numerous barriers to vaccination. Strengthening vaccine demand and acceptance among displaced Rohingyas can be enhanced by improving vaccination delivery practices and engaging trusted leaders to address religious and cultural barriers using community-based channels. 相似文献
Brain edema is a vital contributor to early brain injury after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), which is responsible for prolonged hospitalization and poor outcomes. Pharmacological therapeutic targets on edema formation have been the focus of research for decades. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) has been shown to participate in neural development and brain injury. Here, we used PACAP knockout CRISPR to demonstrate that endogenous PACAP plays an endogenous neuroprotective role against brain edema formation after SAH in rats. The exogenous PACAP treatment provided both short- and long-term neurological benefits by preserving the function of the blood–brain barrier and glymphatic system after SAH. Pretreatment of inhibitors of PACAP receptors showed that the PACAP-involved anti-edema effect and neuroprotection after SAH was facilitated by the selective PACAP receptor (PAC1). Further administration of adenylyl cyclase (AC) inhibitor and sulfonylurea receptor 1 (SUR1) CRISPR activator suggested that the AC–cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)–protein kinase A (PKA) axis participated in PACAP signaling after SAH, which inhibited the expression of edema-related proteins, SUR1 and aquaporin-4 (AQP4), through SUR1 phosphorylation. Thus, PACAP may serve as a potential clinical treatment to alleviate brain edema in patients with SAH.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1007/s13311-020-00925-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Key Words: Subarachnoid hemorrhage, brain edema, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide, blood–brain barrier, glymphatic system相似文献
Background and purpose — Adequate staging of chondroid tumors at diagnosis is important as it determines both treatment and outcome. This systematic review provides an overview of MRI criteria used to differentiate between atypical cartilaginous tumors (ACT) and high-grade chondrosarcoma (HGCS).Patients and methods — For this systematic review PubMed and Embase were searched, from inception of the databases to July 12, 2018. All original articles describing MRI characteristics of pathologically proven primary central chondrosarcoma and ACT were included. A quality appraisal of the included papers was performed. Data on MRI characteristics and histological grade were extracted by 2 reviewers. Meta-analysis was performed if possible. The study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42018067959.Results — Our search identified 2,132 unique records, of which 14 studies were included. 239 ACT and 140 HGCS were identified. The quality assessment showed great variability in consensus criteria used for both pathologic and radiologic diagnosis. Due to substantial heterogeneity we refrained from pooling the results in a meta-analysis and reported non-statistical syntheses. Loss of entrapped fatty marrow, cortical breakthrough, and extraosseous soft tissue expansion appeared to be present more often in HGCS compared with ACT.Interpretation — This systematic review provides an overview of MRI characteristics used to differentiate between ACT and HGCS. Future studies are needed to develop and assess more reliable imaging methods and/or features to differentiate ACT from HGCS.The incidence of chondrosarcoma of bone appears to have been increasing during the last decade and is now reported to be the most common primary malignant bone tumor in several countries (Thorkildsen et al. 2018, van Praag et al. 2018). Conventional chondrosarcoma is the most common subtype of chondrosarcoma. Other subtypes of chondrosarcoma (e.g., juxtacortical, mesenchymal, or secondary chondrosarcoma) are rare and show different radiologic appearance and clinical behavior (Bindiganavile et al. 2015).Conventional chondrosarcoma is classified into the histological grades 1 (currently known as atypical cartilaginous tumor [ACT]), 2, and 3. The metastatic potential, and therefore the disease-specific survival, correlates with the histological grade (Fletcher et al. 2013, Laitinen et al. 2018, Thorkildsen et al. 2018). ACTs rarely metastasize and are therefore reclassified as an intermediate type of tumor, not a malignancy (Fletcher et al. 2013). Due to the increase in patients undergoing MRI examinations for joint-related complaints, the incidental detection of ACT has increased substantially (van Praag et al. 2018).With the increasing incidence of ACT, clear radiologic criteria to differentiate ACT from high-grade chondrosarcoma (i.e., grades 2 and 3) become more and more important. Adequate staging of chondroid tumors at diagnosis is important as it determines both treatment and prognosis. High-grade chondrosarcomas behave aggressively. Between 10% and 30% of grade 2 and about 70% of grade 3 chondrosarcomas metastasize (Evans et al. 1977). Hence, high-grade chondrosarcoma (HGCS) requires wide en bloc resection with free surgical margins. In contrast, ACTs are intermediate tumors and can be treated either with intralesional curettage and local adjuvant or nonoperatively with regular follow-up when located in the long bones (Deckers et al. 2016).Due to the heterogenous composition of chondroid tumors, diagnostic biopsy is unreliable in assessing the genuine histological grade and malignant potential of chondrosarcomas (Laitinen et al. 2018). Therefore, physicians need to rely on imaging and clinical findings (e.g., pain is more common in HGCS) to differentiate ACT from HGCS. Imaging evaluation of cartilaginous and other bone tumors is generally based on multimodal assessment including at least conventional radiography and MRI (Nascimento et al. 2014).During the most recent decades research has focused mainly on differentiating enchondroma from chondrosarcoma (Choi et al. 2013, Douis et al. 2014, Crim et al. 2015, Lisson et al. 2018). New insights have shown that both enchondroma and ACT located in the long bones can be observed without treatment (Deckers et al. 2016, Sampath Kumar et al. 2016, Chung et al. 2018). These insights make the differentiation between ACT and HGCS clinically relevant. Currently, literature on differentiating ACT from HGCS is sparse and clear radiologic criteria are lacking. Therefore, we performed a systematic review to provide an overview of MRI characteristics used to date to differentiate between ACT and HGCS. 相似文献
Cascade testing is the process of offering genetic counseling and testing to at-risk relatives of an individual who has been diagnosed with a genetic condition. It is critical for increasing the identification rates of individuals with these conditions and the uptake of appropriate preventive health services. The process of cascade testing is highly varied in clinical practice, and a comprehensive understanding of factors that hinder or enhance its implementation is necessary to improve this process. We conducted a systematic review to identify barriers and facilitators for cascade testing and searched PubMed, CINAHL via EBSCO, Web of Science, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library for articles published from the databases’ inception to November 2018. Thirty articles met inclusion criteria. Barriers and facilitators identified from these studies at the individual-level were organized into the following categories: (1) demographics, (2) knowledge, (3) attitudes, beliefs, and emotional responses of the individual, and (4) perceptions of relatives, relatives’ responses, and attitudes toward relatives. At the interpersonal-level, barriers and facilitators were categorized as (1) family communication-, support- and dynamics-, and (2) provider-factors. Finally, barriers at the environmental-level relating to accessibility of genetic services were also identified. Our findings suggest that several individual, interpersonal and environmental factors may play a role in cascade testing. Future studies to further investigate these barriers and facilitators are needed to inform future interventions for improving the implementation of cascade testing for genetic conditions in clinical practice.Subject terms: Preventive medicine, Genetic services相似文献
ABSTRACTFood-handler hand-hygiene can be a contributory factor for food-borne illness. Cognitive data (knowledge/attitudes/self-reported practices), while informative, are not indicative of behaviour, and are subject to biases. Consequently, observation of behaviour is superior to survey data. However, researcher presence in direct observation increases reactivity, whereas video observation gives comprehensive analysis over a longer period, furthermore, familiarity reduces reactivity. Although video observation has been used to assess food safety at retail/foodservice, this valuable method is under-utilized in food-manufacturing environments. For the study, footage (24 h) was reviewed to assess compliance in a food-manufacturing site with company protocol. Video observation of food-handlers entering production (n = 674) was assessed; upon 70 occasions no attempt to implement hand-hygiene was observed. Of attempted hand-hygiene practices (n = 604), only 2% implemented compliant practices. Although 78% of attempts utilized soap, only 42% included sanitizer. Duration ranged from 1 to 69 s (Median 17 s). The study provides hand-hygiene data in an area that observational data is seldom captured. 相似文献
Prolonged mechanical ventilation (MV) is a major complication following cardiac surgery. We conducted a secondary analysis of the Transfusion Requirements in Cardiac Surgery (TRICTS) III trial to describe MV duration, identify factors associated with prolonged MV, and examine associations of prolonged MV with mortality and complications.
Methods
Four thousand, eight hundred and nine participants undergoing cardiac surgery at 71 hospitals worldwide were included. Prolonged MV was defined based on the Society of Thoracic Surgeons definition as MV lasting 24 hr or longer. Adjusted associations of patient and surgical factors with prolonged MV were examined using multivariable logistic regression. Associations of prolonged MV with complications were assessed using odds ratios, and adjusted associations between prolonged MV and mortality were evaluated using multinomial regression. Associations of shorter durations of MV with survival and complications were explored.
Results
Prolonged MV occurred in 15% (725/4,809) of participants. Prolonged MV was associated with surgical factors indicative of complexity, such as previous cardiac surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass duration, and separation attempts; and patient factors such as critical preoperative state, left ventricular impairment, renal failure, and pulmonary hypertension. Prolonged MV was associated with perioperative but not long-term complications. After risk adjustment, prolonged MV was associated with perioperative mortality; its association with long-term mortality among survivors was weaker. Shorter durations of MV were not associated with increased risk of mortality or complications.
Conclusion
In this substudy of the TRICS III trial, prolonged MV was common after cardiac surgery and was associated with patient and surgical risk factors. Although prolonged MV showed strong associations with perioperative complications and mortality, it was not associated with long-term complications and had weaker association with long-term mortality among survivors.
Study registration
www.ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02042898); registered 23 January 2014. This is a substudy of the Transfusion Requirements in Cardiac Surgery (TRICS) III trial.