Interstitial lung disease (ILD) represents a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in systemic sclerosis (SSc). The purpose of this study was to examine recirculating lymphocytes from SSc patients for potential biomarkers of interstitial lung disease (ILD). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated from patients with SSc and healthy controls enrolled in the Vanderbilt University Myositis and Scleroderma Treatment Initiative Center cohort between 9/2017–6/2019. Clinical phenotyping was performed by chart abstraction. Immunophenotyping was performed using both mass cytometry and fluorescence cytometry combined with t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding analysis and traditional biaxial gating. This study included 34 patients with SSc-ILD, 14 patients without SSc-ILD, and 25 healthy controls. CD21lo/neg cells are significantly increased in SSc-ILD but not in SSc without ILD (15.4 ± 13.3% vs. 5.8 ± 0.9%, p = 0.002) or healthy controls (5.0 ± 0.5%, p < 0.0001). While CD21lo/neg B cells can be identified from a single biaxial gate, tSNE analysis reveals that the biaxial gate is comprised of multiple distinct subsets, all of which are increased in SSc-ILD. CD21lo/neg cells in both healthy controls and SSc-ILD are predominantly tBET positive and do not have intracellular CD21. Immunohistochemistry staining demonstrated that CD21lo/neg B cells diffusely infiltrate the lung parenchyma of an SSc-ILD patient. Additional work is needed to validate this biomarker in larger cohorts and longitudinal studies and to understand the role of these cells in SSc-ILD.
International Journal of Clinical Oncology - Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are standard treatments for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Patients with poor performance status... 相似文献
A key goal for implementation science is the identification of evidence-based consultation protocols and the active ingredients within these protocols that drive clinician behavior change. The current study examined clinicians’ self-coding of fidelity as a potential active ingredient of consultation for the Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC) intervention. It also examined two other potential predictors of clinician fidelity in response to consultation: dosage of consultation and working alliance. Twenty-nine clinicians (97% female, 62% White, M age?=?34 years) participated in a year of weekly fidelity-focused ABC consultation sessions, for which clinicians self-coded fidelity and received consultant feedback on both their coding and their fidelity. Data from the ABC fidelity measure were available for 1067 sessions coded by consultants, and clinicians’ self-coding accuracy was calculated from 1044 sessions coded by both clinicians and consultants. Alliance was measured with the Working Alliance Inventory—Trainee and Supervisor Versions. The study was observational, and fidelity and self-coding accuracy were modeled across time using hierarchical linear modeling. Clinicians’ ABC fidelity, as well as their self-coding accuracy, increased over the course of consultation. Clinicians’ self-coding accuracy predicted their initial fidelity and growth in fidelity. Working alliance was also linked to fidelity and self-coding accuracy. These results suggest that clinician self-coding should be further examined as an active ingredient of consultation. The study has important implications for the design of consultation procedures and fidelity assessments.
n= 8), multidrug resistance
or noncompliance to the medical treatment (n= 11),
parenchymal sequelae (n= 3), suspected cancer
(n= 5), and for the correction of postpneumonectomy
bronchopleural fistula and empyema (n= 1). On
admission, eight patients presented with sputum positivity (28.6%).
Similar to previous series, tubercular predilection for upper lobes was
confirmed (21/28, 75%); accordingly, upper lobectomy through an
extrapleural approach was the most common procedure (16/28, 57.1%).
Atypical segmental resections or segmentectomies were performed in
seven patients (25%), whereas a bilobectomy was necessary in another
three patients (10.7%) and a completion pneumonectomy in one (3.6%).
Additional procedures were an open-window thoracostomy with
transpericardial closure of the main bronchus and a tailored
thoracoplasty. No operative mortality was reported. Healing was
achieved in 26 patients (93%). Bleeding, either from the chest wall or
hilar dissection, was the only reported intraoperative complication.
Median blood loss, inclusive of early postoperative collections from
chest tubes, reached 1330 ml (range 100–3700 ml). Major postoperative
complications included recurrent disease (2/28, 7%) in sputum-positive
patients and segmental pulmonary embolism (3.5%). Causes of minor
morbidity were air leaks resulting in residual space undergoing
spontaneous resolution (18%), wound breakdown (14%), and, fever
(11%). This limited series confirms the therapeutic value of the
surgical treatment of postprimary tuberculosis, provided that correct
indications, adequate pre- and postoperative medical coverage, and
meticulous technique are applied.相似文献
Mucosal and systemic administrations of high dose antigens induce long-
lasting peripheral T cell tolerance. We and others have shown that high
dose peripheral T cell tolerance is mediated by anergy or deletion and is
preceded by T cell activation. Co-stimulatory molecules B7-1 (CD80)/B7-2
(CD86) and their counter-receptors CD28/CTLA-4 play pivotal roles in T cell
activation and immune regulation. In the present study, we examined the
roles of the B7 co-stimulation pathway in the generation of high dose
peripheral T cell tolerance. We found that blocking B7:CD28/CTLA-4
interaction at the time of tolerance induction partially prevented T cell
tolerance, whereas selective blockade of B7:CTLA-4 interaction completely
abrogated peripheral T cell tolerance induced by either oral or i.p.
antigens. These results suggest that CTLA-4-mediated feedback regulation
plays a crucial role in the induction of high dose peripheral T cell
tolerance.
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Resident macrophages are mainly responsible for the clearance of apoptotic cells from tissue by phagocytosis. Phagocytosis of apoptotic cells is not accompanied by activation of inflammatory mechanisms, unlike what happens when necrotic phenomena occur. We analyzed the effect of phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies on macrophage cell functions. After phagocytosis of apoptotic cells macrophages were unable to present an exogenous antigen to autologous antigen-specific T-cell lines. The inhibition was mediated by different mechanisms including binding of apoptotic DNA to human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules of macrophages, decreased expression of co-stimulatory molecules and increased secretion of tumor growth factor beta (TGFbeta). When dendritic cells were cultured with macrophages phagocytosing apoptotic cells, or with their supernatant, impaired dendritic cell antigen presenting activity and reduced tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) secretion were found. Our results suggest that: (1) the phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies inhibits macrophage antigen presentation; (2) such inhibition is mediated by the binding of apoptotic DNA to macrophage HLA class II molecules as well as by the activation of biological mechanisms that induce an anti-inflammatory functional behavior in macrophages; and (3) macrophages phagocytosing apoptotic cells inhibit antigen presentation of neighboring dendritic cells via TGFbeta secretion. These events are likely related to the preservation of healthy tissues from the onset of inflammation. 相似文献