1.Implementation Strategy Analysis of Clinical Pathway in Large Public Hospitals under DRG Payment Reform
Zhe HE ; Jie ZHANG ; Yuxiong WENG ; Jiahong XIA ; Chao YANG ; Lixia WANG ; Xueli WEI ; Shaowei WU
Chinese Hospital Management 2024;44(4):70-73
Clinical pathway has great similarity with DRG,and plays an important role in standardizing diagnosis and treatment behavior and controlling medical expenses.Based on the analysis of the relationship between DRG payment method reform and clinical pathway,taking a public hospital in Wuhan City,Hubei Province as an example,the clinical pathway implementation strategy of large public hospitals under the DRG payment method reform was explored from five aspects:management system,suitable disease types,doctor's order setting,information system,training and assessment.
2.Identification of USP2 as a novel target to induce degradation of KRAS in myeloma cells.
Yingying WANG ; Youping ZHANG ; Hao LUO ; Wei WEI ; Wanting LIU ; Weiwei WANG ; Yunzhao WU ; Cheng PENG ; Yanjie JI ; Jianfang ZHANG ; Chujiao ZHU ; Wenhui BAI ; Li XIA ; Hu LEI ; Hanzhang XU ; Leimiao YIN ; Wei WENG ; Li YANG ; Ligen LIU ; Aiwu ZHOU ; Yueyue WEI ; Qi ZHU ; Weiliang ZHU ; Yongqing YANG ; Zhijian XU ; Yingli WU
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2024;14(12):5235-5248
Inducing the degradation of KRAS represents a novel strategy to combat cancers with KRAS mutation. In this study, we identify ubiquitin-specific protease 2 (USP2) as a novel deubiquitinating enzyme of KRAS in multiple myeloma (MM). Specifically, we demonstrate that gambogic acid (GA) forms a covalent bond with the cysteine 284 residue of USP2 through an allosteric pocket, inhibiting its deubiquitinating activity. Inactivation or knockdown of USP2 leads to the degradation of KRAS, resulting in the suppression of MM cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo. Conversely, overexpressing USP2 stabilizes KRAS and partially abrogates GA-induced apoptosis in MM cells. Furthermore, elevated USP2 levels may be associated with poorer prognoses in MM patients. These findings highlight the potential of the USP2/KRAS axis as a therapeutic target in MM, suggesting that strategically inducing KRAS degradation via USP2 inhibition could be a promising approach for treating cancers with KRAS mutations.
3.Characteristics and management approaches of patients admitted to isolation ward in public general hospitals under regular epidemic prevention and control of coronavirus disease 2019
Chunxia GUO ; Fenglin WANG ; Yuxiong WENG ; Lixia WANG ; Hua WANG ; Wei LI ; Xin ZHENG ; Jiahong XIA
Chinese Journal of Infectious Diseases 2023;41(9):588-592
Objective:To investigate the characteristics and management approaches of patients admitted to the isolation wards in public general hospitals under regular epidemic prevention and control measures of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).Methods:All patients admitted to the isolation ward in Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, from May 14, 2020 to April 15, 2021 were enrolled, and the general information, illness severity, preliminary diagnosis and transfer department of the patients were analyzed.Results:Out of the 2 292 patients admitted to the isolation ward, critical patients accounted for 34.34% (787 cases), surgical system patients accounted for 80.06% (1 835 cases) and internal medicine system patients accounted for 19.94% (457 cases), fever patients accounted for 11.30% (259 cases). All patients successfully completed COVID-19 screening, and no COVID-19 patients were detected. Among the total enrolled patients, 2 201 patients were promptly transferred to the corresponding departments for further treatment, with an average transfer time of 0.55 day. The remaining 91 patients were discharged from the isolation ward with an average hospitalization stay of 1.27 days.Notably, there were no COVID-19 cross-infection occurred between patients and medical staff in the isolation ward.Conclusions:Scientific and efficient management of isolation wards ensure timely screening and effective treatment for patients, and simultaneously achieving "zero" infection for both medical staff and patients.
4.The criteria and exploration of the neurosurgical base for standardized residency training
Shijuan SHI ; Wei YANG ; Mi TIAN ; Lin YANG ; Feiyan WENG ; Xia CAO ; Shiyong LIU ; Chunqing ZHANG ; Song LI ; Ping ZHAO ; Shengqing LÜ
Chinese Journal of Medical Education Research 2022;21(9):1211-1215
Here, we took base construction of neurosurgery as example to discuss and analyze according to requirements and evaluation indexes of base construction in Xinqiao Hospital, and put forward the specific objectives, measures and implementations of base construction. Foremost, we summarized experiences and overcame shortcomings through interpreting and implementing scheme of our base construction, which would help to improve the construction of standardized residency training base in China.
5.The Establishment and Identification of Acute Myeloid Leukemia NOD-SCID-IL2rg
Wei-Ya ZHANG ; Gao-Chun ZENG ; Xiao-Mei CHEN ; Su-Xia GENG ; Yu-Lian WANG ; Qiong LUO ; Liu-Ping LUO ; Pei-Long LAI ; Jian-Yu WENG ; Xin DU
Journal of Experimental Hematology 2021;29(5):1429-1435
OBJECTIVE:
To establish the in vivo traceable acute myeloid leukemia mice model with Luciferase-Expressing KG1a Cells.
METHODS:
KG1a cells with stable luciferase gene expression (called as KG1a-Luc cells) were constructed by lentivirus transfection, then sifted out by puromycin. Eighteen male NOD-SCID-IL2rg
RESULTS:
KG1a cells expressing luciferase stably were successfully obtained. The tumor luminescence wildly spread at day 17 captured by in vivo imaging. The KG1a-Luc tumor cells could be detected in the peripheral blood of the mice, with the average percentage of (16.27±6.66)%. The morphology and pathology result showed that KG1a-Luc cells infiltrate was detected in bone marrow, spleens and livers. The survival time of the KG1a-Luc mice was notably shorter as compared with those in the control group, the median survival time was 30.5 days (95%CI: 0.008-0.260).
CONCLUSION
The acute myeloid leukemia NOD-SCID-IL2rg
Animals
;
Disease Models, Animal
;
Interleukin Receptor Common gamma Subunit
;
Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute
;
Luciferases/genetics*
;
Male
;
Mice
;
Mice, Inbred NOD
;
Mice, SCID
6.Efficacy and safety study of Chinese botulinum toxin A 100U in patients with overactive bladder: a prospective, multicenter, double-blind and randomized controlled trial
Limin LIAO ; Huiling CONG ; Zhihui XU ; Enhui LI ; Zhiliang WENG ; Haihong JIANG ; Ben LIU ; Xiao HUANG ; Shujie XIA ; Wei WEN ; Juan WU ; Guowei SHI ; Yang WANG ; Peijun LI ; Yang YU ; Zujun FANG ; Jie ZHENG ; Ye TIAN ; Haodong SHANG ; Hanzhong LI ; Zhongming HUANG ; Liqun ZHOU ; Yunxiang XIAO ; Yaoguang ZHANG ; Jianlong WANG ; Xiaodong ZHANG ; Peng ZHANG ; Dongwen WANG ; Xuhui ZHANG ; Keji XIE ; Bin WANG ; Lulin MA ; Xiaojun TIAN ; Lijun CHEN ; Jinkai DONG
Chinese Journal of Urology 2021;42(6):414-422
Objective:To assess the efficacy and safety of 100 units of botulinum toxin A (BTX-A) intradetrusor injection in patients with overactive bladder.Methods:From April 2016 to December 2018, 17 tertiary hospitals were selected to participate in this prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Two phases of study were conducted: the primary phase and the extended phase. This study enrolled patients aged 18 to 75 years who had been inadequately managed by anticholinergic therapy (insufficient efficacy or intolerable side effects) and had spontaneous voiding with overactive bladder. Exclusion criteria included patients with severe cardiac, renal and hepatic disorders, patients with previous botulinum toxin treatment for 6 months or allergic to BTX-A, patients with urinary tract infections, patients with urinary stones, urinary tract tumors, diabetes mellitus, and bleeding tendency. Eligible patients were randomly assigned to BTX-A group and placebo control group in a ratio of 2∶1. Two groups of patients received 20 intradetrusor injections of BTX-A 100U or placebo at the depth of the submucosal muscle layer respectively under cystoscope, including 5 injections at the base of the bladder, 3 injections to the bladder triangle, 5 injections each to the left and right walls and 2 injections to the top, sparing the bladder neck. As a placebo control group, patients received same volume of placebo containing no BTX-A and only adjuvant freeze-dried preparations for injection with the same method. A combination of gelatin, sucrose, and dextran served as adjuvants. Average micturition times per 24 hours, urinary incontinence (UI) episodes per day, average micturition volume per day, OAB symptom score(OABSS), and quality of life (QOL) score were recorded at baseline and the 2nd, 6th and 12th week after treatment. The primary efficacy endpoint was the change from baseline in the average micturition times per 24 hours at the 6th week after treatment. The secondary efficacy endpoints included the change from baseline in the average micturition times per 24 hours at 2nd and 12th week, as well as the change from baseline in the OABSS, QOL score, average frequency of urgency and UI episodes per day, urgency score, average micturition volume per day at 2nd, 6th and 12th week after treatment. Patients were followed for 12 weeks to assess adverse events (AEs). After assessed at week 12, if the micturition times has decreased less than 50% compared to baseline and the patient is willing to receive retreatment, then patients could enter the extended trial phase. In that phase, patients in both groups were injected with 100 units BTX-A from 12th week onwards and then followed up the same indicators for 12 weeks.Results:216 patients were enrolled in this trial (144 cases in the BTX-A group and 72 cases in the placebo control group). Baseline characteristics such as age (47.75±14.20 in the BTX-A group and 46.39±15.55 in the control group), sex (25 male/117 female in the BTX-A group and 10/61 in the control group), and disease duration (0.51 years in the BTX-A group and 0.60 years in the control group) were balanced between the two groups( P>0.05). A marked reduction from baseline in average micturition times per 24 hours was observed in all treatment groups at the 6th week and the reduction of the two groups was statistically different ( P<0.001 and P=0.008 respectively). Compared with the baseline, the average micturition times per 24 hours at the 6th week decreased from baseline by 2.40(0.70, 4.60)times for the BTX-A group and 0.70(-1.00, 3.30) times for the placebo control group respectively, and the difference between the two groups was considered to be statistically significant ( P=0.003). The change rates of average micturition times per 24 hours from baseline at the 6th week of the two groups were (16±22)% and (8±25)% respectively, and the difference between the two groups was statistically significant ( P=0.014). Compared with the baseline, the average micturition times per 24 hours at 2nd and 12th week decreased by 2.00(0.00, 4.00)and 3.30(0.60, 5.03)for the BTX-A group, 1.00(-1.00, 3.00)and 1.70(-1.45, 3.85)for the placebo control group respectively. The difference between two groups was considered to be statistically significant ( P=0.038 and P=0.012); the changes of average urgency times per day for the BTX-A group and the control group at the 2nd, 6th and 12th week were 2.00(0.00, 4.30)and 2.40(0.30, 5.00), 3.00(0.30, 5.70)and 0.70(-1.30, 2.70), 0.70(-1.30, 3.00) and 1.35(-1.15, 3.50), respectively. There were significant differences between two groups at the 2nd, 6th and 12th week, ( P=0.010, P=0.003 and P=0.025, respectively). The OABSS of the BTX-A group and the control group at the 6th week decreased by 1.00(0.00, 4.00)and 0.50(-1.00, 2.00) compared with the baseline, and the difference between the two groups was statistically significant ( P=0.003). 47 cases of BTX-A group and 34 cases of placebo control group entered the extended trial phase, and 40 and 28 cases completed the extended trial phase, respectively. The average micturition volume per 24 hours changed by -16.60(-41.60, -0.60)ml and -6.40(-22.40, 13.30)ml, (-35.67±54.41)ml and(-1.76±48.69)ml, (-36.14±41.51)ml and (-9.28±44.59)ml, (-35.85±43.35)ml and(-10.41±40.29)ml for two groups at the 12th, 14th, 18th and 24th week, and the difference between two groups was statistically significant at each follow-up time ( P=0.01, 0.006, 0.012 and 0.016, respectively). There was no significant difference in other parameters( P>0.05). However, adverse reactions after intradetrusor injection included increased residual urine volume (27 in the BTX-A group and 3 in the control group), dysuria (21 in the BTX-A group and 6 in the control group), urinary infection (19 in the BTX-A group and 6 in the control group), bladder neck obstruction (3 in the BTX-A group and 0 in the control group), hematuria (3 in the BTX-A group and 1 in the control group), elevated alanine aminotransferase (3 in the BTX-A group and 0 in the control group), etc. During the follow-up period, there was no significant difference in the other adverse events between two groups except the increase of residual urine volume( P<0.05). In the primary trial phase, among the 27 cases with increased residual urine volume in BTA group, only 1 case (3.70%) with PVR more than 300 ml; the PVR of 3 patients in the placebo group was less than 100 ml. The increase of residual urine volume caused by the injection could be improved or disappeared with the passage of time. Conclusions:Intradetrusor injection of Chinese BTX-A improved the average micturition times per 24 hours, the average daily urgent micturition times, OABSS, and average micturition volume per time, and reduced the adverse effects in patients with overactive bladder.Chinese BTX-A at dose of 100U demonstrated durable efficacy and safety in the management of overactive bladder.
7.Analysis of related risk factors for the refracture of adjacent vertebral body after percutaneous kyphoplasty.
Shen-Yun FANG ; Ji-Kang MIN ; Zhong-You ZENG ; Qiang-Hua ZHANG ; Tao ZHU ; Wei WENG ; Wei-Li ZHANG ; Fang-Ying SHEN ; Ying XIA ; Li-Ying DING
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2021;34(8):705-709
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the risk factors of vertebral refracture after percutaneous kyphoplasty (PKP) for osteoprotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCFs), and to provide reference for clinical prevention.
METHODS:
A retrospective analysis of 228 OVCFs patients who met the inclusion criteria admitted from November 6, 2013 to December 14, 2018. There were 35 males and 193 females, with a male-to-female ratio of 3∶20, and aged 58 to 91 years with an average of (69.70±7.03) years. All patients were treated with PKP and had complete clinical data. According to whether refracture occurred after operation, they were divided into refracture group (24 cases) and non refracture group (204 cases). Factors that may be related to refracture (including gender, age, surgical segment, number of vertebral bodies in the surgical segment, whether combined with degenerative scoliosis, whether anti-osteoporosis treatment) were included in the univariate analyses, and the single factor analysis of statistically significant risk factors was carried out with multiple Logistic regression analysis to further clarify the independent risk factors for vertebral body refracture after PKP. Survival analysis was performed using the time of vertebral refracture after PKP as the end time of follow up, the occurrence of refracture after PKP as the endpoint event, and the presence or absence of degenerative lateral curvature as a variable factor.
RESULTS:
All 228 patients were followed up for 1.8 to 63.6 months with an average of (28.8±15.6) months, and the refracture rate was 10.5%(24/228). There were statistically significant differences between two groups in age, number of operative vertebral bodies, whether combinedwith degenerative scoliosis and whether anti osteoporosis treatment (
CONCLUSION
Combined scoliosis is an independent risk factor for refracture after OVCFs vertebroplasty, and it is also a possible high-risk factor for refracture after surgery.
Female
;
Fractures, Compression/surgery*
;
Humans
;
Kyphoplasty/adverse effects*
;
Male
;
Osteoporotic Fractures
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
;
Spinal Fractures/surgery*
;
Vertebral Body
8.Swallowing function and its related factors in elderly people in welfare homes of Wenzhou City
Xian-jun WENG ; Jian-ping HUANG ; Yi-wei YE ; Jin-ying BAO ; Ling-qin HU ; Xia SHAO ; Hui-jing MA
Shanghai Journal of Preventive Medicine 2021;33(8):750-753
Objective:To understand the swallowing function of the elderly in welfare homes of Wenzhou City,Zhejiang Province and to analyze the related factors of swallowing dysfunction. Methods:A total of 507 elderly people aged 60 years and over were surveyed by questionnaires in three welfare homes of Wenzhou City from January 2018 to January 2020.Hinds time-limited water drinking test was used to screen dysphagia. Multivariate unconditional logistic regression analysis was used to analyze the related factors of swallowing dysfunction. Results:The incidence of swallowing dysfunction was 26.04% (132 out of 507). Univariate analysis showed that there were significant differences in the incidence of swallowing dysfunction among the elderly in terms of age, spouse condition, self-care ability, health status, taking sleeping pills, cerebrovascular disease, nervous system disease and depression (
10. Analysis on the occurrence characteristics of pressure injuries caused by COVID-19 pneumonia protective equipment
Qi-xia JIANG ; Dong-mei ZHU ; Gui-lin WANG ; Li LI ; Yu-xiu LIU ; Hai-ying LIU ; Ai-hua CHEN ; Wei WEI ; Jia-yu XUE ; Zhi-qiang WENG
Journal of Medical Postgraduates 2020;33(8):850-854
ObjectiveWearing protective masks for a long time causes a large number of frontline health care workers to suffer different degrees of pressure injury or facial skin rupture in response to COVID-19. This paper aims to analyze the occurrence characteristics and related factors of pressure injury related to devices, and provide the basis for taking countermeasures. Methods There was online investigation of skin injuries caused by wearing protective equipment in medical staff. Descriptive analysis was carried out on the occurrence characteristics of pressure-induced injury, and influencing factors were analyzed through logistic regression model. ResultsThere were a total of 2901 valid questionnaires. The results showed that the incidence of pressure injury caused by protective equipment was 26.34%, mainly in the bridge of the nose (20.41%), cheek (20.23%), auricle (17.82%) and forehead (8.86%). Multivariate Logistic regression model analysis showed that the major associated factors, which presented increasing risk, were sweating and dampness (OR=12.72, 95%CI 8.36-17.30), wearing level-3 protective equipment (OR=3.55, 95%CI 2.47-5.08), wearing level-2 protective equipment (OR=3.37, 95%CI 2.47-4.60), wearing time (OR=1.29, 95%CI 1.05~1.58) and occupation (OR=1.57, 95%CI 1.00~2.49). Conclusion There is the high incidence of pressure injuries to health care workers caused by protective equipment against COVID-19. The main risk factors for facial stress injury of medical staff are sweating and dampness, wearing level-3 and level-2 protective equipment and wearing time.

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