1.CRY1 Variations Impacts on the Depressive Relapse Rate in a Sample of Bipolar Patients.
Antonio DRAGO ; Barbara MONTI ; Diana DE RONCHI ; Alessandro SERRETTI
Psychiatry Investigation 2015;12(1):118-124
OBJECTIVE: A relevant part of the social and personal burden caused by Bipolar Disorder (BD) is related to depressive phases. Authors investigated the genetic impact of a set of variations located in CRY1, a gene involved in the control of the circadian rhythms, towards depressive episodes in a sample of bipolar patients from the STEP-BD sample. As a secondary analysis, CYR1 variations were analyzed as predictors of sleep disruption. METHODS: 654 bipolar patients were included in the analysis. Data were available genome-wide. The part of the genome coding for the CRY1 was imputed and pruned according to standards in the field. 7 SNPs were available for the analysis. A correction for multitesting was applied and we had sufficient power (0.80) to detect a small-medium effect size (0.22) between two allelic frequencies each one represented by at least 300 subjects. RESULTS: Intronic rs10861688 was associated with the number of depressive events corrected for the times patients were assessed during the period of observation. In particular, AA subjects (n=21) had 4.46+/-3.15 events, AG (n=141) had 3.08+/-3.17 and GG (n=342) 2.65+/-2.97 (p=0.0048, beta=-0.22). No other significant associations were reported. CONCLUSION: We bring further evidence that genes involved in the regulation of circadian rhythms may be relevant to depressive bipolar phases. Independent confirmation analyses are mandatory.
Bipolar Disorder
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Circadian Rhythm
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Clinical Coding
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Genes, vif
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Genome
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Humans
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Introns
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Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
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Recurrence*
2.Monitoring the activities of Italian colposcopy clinics before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
Giovanni Delli CARPINI ; Paolo Giorgi ROSSI ; Luca GIANNELLA ; Jacopo Di GIUSEPPE ; Nicolò CLEMENTE ; Francesco SOPRACORDEVOLE ; Maggiorino BARBERO ; Giorgio BOGANI ; Rosa De VINCENZO ; Massimo ORIGONI ; Francesco CANTATORE ; Barbara GARDELLA ; Mattia DOMINONI ; Ermelinda MONTI ; Carlo Antonio LIVERANI ; Anna VISCARDI ; Alessio PAGAN ; Andrea AMADORI ; Chiara ALESSI ; Matteo ANDOLFATTO ; Paolo CATTANI ; Annalisa PIERALLI ; Guido STEVENAZZI ; Andrea CIAVATTINI
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 2023;34(1):e7-
Objective:
To evaluate the impact of healthcare reorganization during the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemic on Italian colposcopy clinic activities, focusing on cervical excision procedures, follow-ups for conservative management of low-grade lesions, and follow-ups post cervical excision.
Methods:
Retrospective study conducted in 14 Italian colposcopy clinics. The number and clinical characteristics of cervical excisions, follow-ups for conservative management of low-grade lesions, and follow-ups after cervical excision were compared between the period March 1, 2019 to February 29, 2020 (pre-pandemic) and March 1, 2020 to February 28, 2021 (pandemic) with a Poisson regression analysis.
Results:
In the pandemic period, the number of cervical excisions was reduced by 8.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]=−15.6% to −2%; p=0.011). Excisions were less frequently performed in the operating room (−35.1%; 95% CI=−47.6% to −22.6%; p<0.001), the number of patients from spontaneous screening was reduced by −14.0% (95% CI=−23.4% to −4.6%; p=0.003), and the CO2-laser technique was used less frequently (−30%; 95% CI=−45.1% to −15.0%; p<0.001). As compared to the pre-pandemic period, the number of follow-ups for conservative management of low-grade lesions was reduced by −26.7% (95% CI=−39.0% to −14.4%; p<0.001), and the follow-up appointments after cervical excision were reduced by −51.0% (95% CI=−58.1% to −43.9%; p<0.001).
Conclusion
The most significant impact of the healthcare reorganization during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic was on follow-ups after cervical excision. The resumption of disrupted activities should follow a risk-based prioritization, starting from women in follow-up after cervical excision. It is advisable that the trend of performing cervical excision as an outpatient procedure is maintained in the post-pandemic period.