1.Phenotypic and genotypic analysis of five fetuses with Harlequin ichthyosis due to variants of ABCA12 gene.
Yimo ZENG ; Juan ZHU ; Jing WU ; Chen LI ; Yiming QI ; Jiaqi LU ; Ruiman LI ; Aihua YIN
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2025;42(11):1302-1307
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the clinical and genetic characteristics of five fetuses with Harlequin ichthyosis (HI).
METHODS:
Five fetuses with HI diagnosed at Guangdong Women and Children Hospital between 2017 and 2024 were selected as study subjects. Clinical and laboratory data were collected and reviewed. Whole exome sequencing (WES) was carried out, and candidate variants were verified by bioinformatic analysis. This study was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the hospital (Ethics No.: 202401024).
RESULTS:
The five fetuses had presented with ectropion, eclabium and contracture and flexion of fingers and toes. WES revealed that all had harbored compound heterozygous or homozygous variants of the ABCA12 gene. Among the eight types of variants, five were unreported previously.
CONCLUSION
The compound heterozygous or homozygous variants of the ABCA12 gene probably underlay the HI in the five fetuses. Clinicians should be vigilant about the possibility of HI in fetus with ectropion, eclabium, and contracture and flexion of fingers and toes.
Humans
;
Ichthyosis, Lamellar/genetics*
;
Female
;
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics*
;
Pregnancy
;
Genotype
;
Phenotype
;
Exome Sequencing
;
Fetus
;
Mutation
;
Male
;
Adult
2.Study on the efficacy and safety of Metformin hydrochloride enteric-coated capsules in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus
Yiming WU ; Jian ZHANG ; Nan GU ; Qijuan DONG ; Ruiyun LIU ; Hong ZHANG ; Haixia LIU ; Yongcai ZHAO ; Lin CHENG ; Lianshan PU ; Fang BIAN ; Gang HE ; Quanmin LI ; Wei DU ; Zhaoling WANG ; Wei XU ; Liyong ZHONG ; Xiaohui GUO
Chinese Journal of Diabetes 2025;33(3):210-214
Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of enteric-coated metformin hydrochloride capsules(Junlida?)in patients with T2DM and poor glycemic control under lifestyle interventions.Methods In this study,419 patients with T2DM were recruited from 15 research centers from July 2020 to March 2022,and randomly divided into observation(Obs)group(n=209)and control group(Con,n=210)using a multicenter,randomized,double-blind,non-inferiority trial design.Patients in the Obs group were treated with enteric-coated Metformin hydrochloride capsules(Junlida?),and patients in the Con group were treated with Metformin hydrochloride tablets(Glucophage?).The optimal effective dose of 2 g/d was achieved within 4 weeks,and the reasonable dose was maintained until the end of treatment.The treatment period was 24 weeks.HbA1c and its compliance rate,FPG,and body weight were compared between the two groups in full analysis set(FAS)and protocol set(PPS).Safety and adverse events(AE)were evaluated in safety set(SS).Results A total of 414 participants were randomized(207 cases in Obs group and 207 cases in Con group).414 cases in FAS population(207 cases in Obs group and 207 cases in Con group),and 328 cases in PPS population(164 cases in Obs group and 164 cases in Con group),and 414 cases in SS population(207 cases in Obs group and 207 cases in Con group).After treatment,HbA1c,FPG and body weight were lower in both groups(P<0.05)in FAS and PPS.HbA1c compliance rate was not significantly different between the two groups in FAS and PPS(P>0.05).The results of non-inferiority test showed that the lower limit was>-0.4%in both FAS(-0.154,95%CI-0.384~0.069)and PPS(-0.139,95%CI-0.390~0.112),and the Obs group reached non-inferiority end point.The achievement rate,compliance rate,safety index and incidence of AE were not significantly different between the two groups(P>0.05).Conclusions Junlida? demonstrated non-inferiority to Glucophage? in glycemic control and can be safely and effectively used in patients with diabetes.
3.Application of CT guided percutaneous interstitial brachytherapy in the treatment of recurrent cervical cancer with isolated lesions in the radiated field
Yiming MA ; Weili XIA ; Dongbo WANG ; Hao WU ; Mingchuan ZHANG ; Shuxia CHENG
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2025;47(8):745-749
Objective:To explore the safety and efficacy of computed tomography (CT) guided percutaneous interstitial brachytherapy in the treatment of recurrent cervical cancer with isolated lesions in the radiated field.Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on the clinical data of 30 patients with recurrent cervical cancer with isolated lesions in the radiated field who underwent CT guided percutaneous interstitial implantation for close range radiation treatment at Zhengzhou University Affiliated Cancer Hospital from March 2023 to August 2024. Under local anesthesia, a needle was implanted into the recurrent tumor in the pelvic or abdominal wall of the patients percutaneously guided by CT. The target area was delineated to ensure full dose coverage. The prescribed dose for high-risk clinical target areas was 600 cGy/time, once a week, followed by close range radiotherapy. The number of implanted needles were recorded, and the target area, radiation dose, and other parameters were evaluated through dose volume parameter maps. The degree of lesion shrinkage and the occurrence of complications during and after treatment were observed.Results:30 patients underwent a total of 72 rounds of brachytherapy with implantation, with a technical success rate of 100% (72/72). 20 cases received 2 treatments, 8 cases received 3 treatments, and 2 cases received 4 treatments; 4 cases used 1needle, 20 cases used 2 needles, 4 cases used 3 needles, and 2 cases used 4 needles. The high-risk clinical target dose D 90 was (718.17±222.61) cGy. The average dose D 2cc of 2 cm 3 surrounding the bladder, rectum, sigmoid colon, and small intestine was (168.29±53.80) cGy, (178.87±105.38) cGy, (136.05±78.06) cGy, and (288.91±117.49) cGy, respectively. The median follow-up time was 11 months. Among the 30 patients, there were 12 cases of complete remission,14 cases of partial remission, 3 cases of stable disease, and 1 case of disease progression, with an objective remission rate of 86.7%. None of the patients experienced significant bleeding or pain during treatment. After treatment, 3 patients with recurrent lymph nodes near the rectum developed grade 1 radiation proctitis, which was remitted after treatment. No significant complications were observed in the remaining patients. Conclusion:CT guided percutaneous brachytherapy is safe and feasible for the recurrence of single lesions in the radiated field of cervical cancer.
4.Iatrogenic risks and countermeasures of smart healthcare for chronic diseases
Yiming HU ; Haotian WU ; Yang LIU ; Dong CHEN ; Yaqiang WANG ; Qian ZHOU ; Xueqing YANG ; Liling CHEN ; Xiangjun YIN ; Jing WU
Chinese Journal of Hospital Administration 2025;41(3):234-238
Smart healthcare plays an important role in easing the strain on medical resources and improving the continuity of chronic disease management. This study analysed the iatrogenic risks from the intrinsic attributes and the external environment of smart healthcare, including doctor-patient conflict risk, technical operation risk, information leakage risk, humanistic absence risk, legal risk, regulatory risk and ethical risk. Based on the " structure process result" model, suggestions were proposed to optimize the construction of a smart healthcare platform for chronic diseases, improve the legal system and industry standards, strengthen talent cultivation and capacity building, establish an integrated regulatory system, and regularly evaluate the effectiveness of chronic disease management. These suggestions provided references for creating a healthy, orderly, and safe smart healthcare environment for chronic disease patients.
5.Experimental study of 89Zr-labeled anti-human PDPN monoclonal antibody SZ168 for immunoPET imaging of melanoma
Yu LIU ; Xiaohui SUN ; Siwen LIU ; Jiang WU ; Yue LANG ; Jinchang WU ; Yuechao YU ; Yiming ZHAO ; Feng WANG
Chinese Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2025;45(8):470-474
Objective:To prepare 89Zr-labeled anti-human podoplanin (PDPN) monoclonal antibody SZ168 and evaluate its feasibility for melanoma immunoPET imaging. Methods:89Zr-desferrioxamine (DFO)-SZ168 was prepared by conjugating p-isothiocyanatobenzyl (SCN-Bn)-DFO with SZ168 and chelating with 89Zr. Quality control analyses were conducted, including labeling rate, radiochemical purity, and in vitro stability. Melanoma mouse models were created, with experimental group ( n=3) and control group ( n=3) receiving tail vein injections of 89Zr-DFO-SZ168 and 89Zr-DFO-immunoglobulin (Ig)G solutions (3.7MBq) respectively. The experimental group underwent microPET/CT imaging at 12, 24, 48 and 72h post-injection, while the control group underwent imaging at 48h post-injection. Tumor and organ radioactivity uptake was analyzed using the ROI method. Mice were sacrificed at 7d post-injection to assess the ex vivo biodistribution of 89Zr-DFO-SZ168 and 89Zr-DFO-IgG. Independent-sample t test was used to analyze the data. Results:The pH value of the 89Zr-DFO-SZ168 solution was approximately 7.0, with a labeling rate >60%, radiochemical purity >95% after PD10 column purification, and good stability after 72h in vitro. Series microPET/CT imagings showed significant tumor visualization in tumor-bearing mice. Radioactivity uptake in tumors peaked at 48h post-injection, while the tumor was not clearly detected by 89Zr-DFO-IgG microPET/CT imaging. Ex vivo biodistribution indicated that 89Zr-DFO-SZ168 mainly accumulated in tumors, liver, and bones, with tumor uptake significantly higher than that of 89Zr-DFO-IgG ((29.36±7.29) percentage activity of injection dose per gram of tissue (%ID/g) vs (8.78±1.63) %ID/g; t=4.77, P=0.009). Immunohistochemistry of tumor specimens showed high expression of PDPN in tumor tissues. Conclusions:The probe 89Zr-DFO-SZ168 is successfully prepared, showing potential for specific molecular imaging diagnosis of melanoma. This lays a basis for developing PDPN molecular target-based immuno-PET diagnosis and integrated diagnosis and treatment for melanoma.
6.Effect of ABO blood group compatibility on early complications after liver transplantation: a retrospective analysis
Xuemin WU ; Yiming MA ; Xiaofei LI
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion 2025;38(8):1043-1049
Objective: To analyze the correlation between ABO blood group compatibility and the risk of early complications after liver transplantation, and to identify risk factors for clinical intervention. Methods: Clinical data of 404 liver transplant recipients and donors were collected. Based on donor-recipient ABO matching, patients were divided into three groups: ABO-Identical (ABO-Id, n=313), ABO-compatible (ABO-c, n=68), ABO-incompatible (ABO-i, n=23). Clinical data, early complications, and associated risk factors were compared. Results: Compared with the ABO-Id, ABO-c and ABO-i recipients were younger, had a higher proportion of primary biliary atresia, and more frequently received living-donor transplantation from relatives (P<0.05). Overall complication rates were: ABO-c 47.1% (32/68), ABO-i 43.5% (10/23), ABO-Id 39.3% (123/313), with no significant intergroup difference (P>0.05). Infection was the most common complication [ABO-c 30.9% (21/68), ABO-i 21.7% (5/23), ABO-Id 17.9% (56/313)]. No significant differences were found in infection, vascular/biliary or acute kidney injury/renal failure among the three groups (P>0.05). However, ABO-c group had significantly higher rates of ascites/abscess (20.6% vs 8.9%, P<0.05) and pleural effusion (14.7% vs 7.0%, P<0.05) than ABO-Id group. There was no significant difference in the incidence of complications and ABO blood group between ABO non-Identical (ABO-c and ABO-i) and Identical groups. Logistic regression analysis showed that the risk of ascites/abscess in ABO non-Identical was higher than that in ABO-Id liver transplantation (P<0.05), and the risk of ascites/abscess after ABO-c liver transplantation was 2.246 times higher than that of ABO-Id liver transplantation. The primary biliary atresia were a risk factor for postoperative ascites/abscess. Conclusion: Enhanced postoperative management is critical for ABO-nonidentical (especially ABO-compatible) recipients, and those with biliary atresia to reduce complication risks.
7.Analysis of the surgical management of gastrointestinal foreign bodies
Sixian WANG ; Tao LIU ; Yingchao WU ; Tao WU ; Guowei CHEN ; Yong JIANG ; Lie SUN ; Jingui WANG ; Yiming LIU ; Weidong DOU ; Xiao CHEN ; Tianye LIU ; Junling ZHANG ; Xin WANG
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2025;40(11):874-878
Objective:Analyze the risk factors of gastrointestinal perforation caused by foreign body and summarize the experience of surgical treatment of foreign bodies.Method:From Jan 2008 to Dec 2023, 89 patients with foreign bodies in the digestive tract were admitted to the Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Peking University First Hospital. Relevant data were collected and binary logistic regression was used to analyze the independent risk factors for intestinal perforation, resection and anastomosis of intestine or enterostomy/colostomy.Results:The mean age of 89 patients was (60.1±16.2) years old, 65 patients (73%) had unintentionally ingested foreign bodies. The most common foreign bodies were jujube pits (40 cases). Thirty-nine patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal perforation. Binary Logistic regression analysis showed that the total number of leukocytes ( OR=4.085, 95% CI: 1.214-13.745, P=0.023), sharp foreign body ( OR=26.124, 95% CI: 5.194-131.392, P<0.001), and the location of foreign body ( OR=3.980, 95% CI: 1.178-13.465, P=0.026) were the independent risk factors for gastrointestinal perforation. Thirty-three patients underwent gastrointestinal repair surgery, and 36 patients underwent resection and anastomosis of intestine or enterostomy/colostomy. Binary Logistic regression analysis showed that the foreign body located in the colorectum ( OR=71.928, 95% CI: 4.646-1 113.479, P=0.002) and the length of the foreign body ≤2.5 cm ( OR=5.791, 95% CI: 1.606-20.882, P=0.007) were the independent risk factors for resection and anastomosis of intestine or enterostomy/colostomy. Conclusions:Leukocyte count ≥10×10 9/L, sharp foreign body, and location of foreign body are independent risk factors for gastrointestinal perforation. Foreign body located in the colorectum and foreign body length ≤2.5 cm are risk factors for resection and anastomosis of intestine or enterostomy/colostomy.
8.Gallstones, cholecystectomy, and cancer risk: an observational and Mendelian randomization study.
Yuanyue ZHU ; Linhui SHEN ; Yanan HUO ; Qin WAN ; Yingfen QIN ; Ruying HU ; Lixin SHI ; Qing SU ; Xuefeng YU ; Li YAN ; Guijun QIN ; Xulei TANG ; Gang CHEN ; Yu XU ; Tiange WANG ; Zhiyun ZHAO ; Zhengnan GAO ; Guixia WANG ; Feixia SHEN ; Xuejiang GU ; Zuojie LUO ; Li CHEN ; Qiang LI ; Zhen YE ; Yinfei ZHANG ; Chao LIU ; Youmin WANG ; Shengli WU ; Tao YANG ; Huacong DENG ; Lulu CHEN ; Tianshu ZENG ; Jiajun ZHAO ; Yiming MU ; Weiqing WANG ; Guang NING ; Jieli LU ; Min XU ; Yufang BI ; Weiguo HU
Frontiers of Medicine 2025;19(1):79-89
This study aimed to comprehensively examine the association of gallstones, cholecystectomy, and cancer risk. Multivariable logistic regressions were performed to estimate the observational associations of gallstones and cholecystectomy with cancer risk, using data from a nationwide cohort involving 239 799 participants. General and gender-specific two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was further conducted to assess the causalities of the observed associations. Observationally, a history of gallstones without cholecystectomy was associated with a high risk of stomach cancer (adjusted odds ratio (aOR)=2.54, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.50-4.28), liver and bile duct cancer (aOR=2.46, 95% CI 1.17-5.16), kidney cancer (aOR=2.04, 95% CI 1.05-3.94), and bladder cancer (aOR=2.23, 95% CI 1.01-5.13) in the general population, as well as cervical cancer (aOR=1.69, 95% CI 1.12-2.56) in women. Moreover, cholecystectomy was associated with high odds of stomach cancer (aOR=2.41, 95% CI 1.29-4.49), colorectal cancer (aOR=1.83, 95% CI 1.18-2.85), and cancer of liver and bile duct (aOR=2.58, 95% CI 1.11-6.02). MR analysis only supported the causal effect of gallstones on stomach, liver and bile duct, kidney, and bladder cancer. This study added evidence to the causal effect of gallstones on stomach, liver and bile duct, kidney, and bladder cancer, highlighting the importance of cancer screening in individuals with gallstones.
Humans
;
Mendelian Randomization Analysis
;
Gallstones/complications*
;
Female
;
Male
;
Cholecystectomy/statistics & numerical data*
;
Middle Aged
;
Risk Factors
;
Aged
;
Adult
;
Neoplasms/etiology*
;
Stomach Neoplasms/epidemiology*
9.A cascade reaction nanoplatform with magnetic resonance imaging capability for combined photothermal/chemodynamic/gas cancer therapy.
Jinyu WANG ; Yuhao GUO ; Xiaomei WU ; Yiming MA ; Qianqian QIAO ; Linwei LI ; Tao LIAO ; Ying KUANG ; Cao LI
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(9):101223-101223
To effectively exploit the tumor microenvironment (TME), TME-responsive nanocarriers based on cascade reactions have received much attention. In this study, we designed a novel nanoparticle PB@SiO2@MnO2@P-Arg (PMP) to construct a cascade reaction nanoplatform. While using biosafety Prussian blue (PB) for photothermal therapy (PTT), this nanoplatform uses silica (SiO2) as an intermediate layer to assemble Prussian blue and manganese dioxide (MnO2) into a core-shell structure, which effectively enhances the response of the nanoplatform to TME and promotes the effect of chemodynamic therapy (CDT) resulting from glutathione (GSH) depletion and Fenton-like reaction. The released Mn2+ can also be used for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Through the cascade reaction, poly-l-arginine (P-Arg) coated on the surface of the nanoparticles can react with hydroxyl radical (•OH) obtained from the Fenton-like reaction to release nitric oxide (NO), which further reacts with O2•- to produce the more toxic peroxynitrite anion (ONOO-). The photothermal effect of PB further enhances the effect of the cascade reaction while reducing the amount of heat required for treatment. In vitro and in vivo studies confirmed the antitumor effects of cascade reaction-based nanoplatforms in combined photothermal/chemodynamic/gas cancer therapies, providing new strategies for the design and fabrication of multifunctional nanoplatforms that integrate diagnostic and therapeutic functions, as well as the application of cascade reactions in multimodal synergistic therapy.
10.Guideline-driven clinical decision support for colonoscopy patients using the hierarchical multi-label deep learning method.
Junling WU ; Jun CHEN ; Hanwen ZHANG ; Zhe LUAN ; Yiming ZHAO ; Mengxuan SUN ; Shufang WANG ; Congyong LI ; Zhizhuang ZHAO ; Wei ZHANG ; Yi CHEN ; Jiaqi ZHANG ; Yansheng LI ; Kejia LIU ; Jinghao NIU ; Gang SUN
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(20):2631-2639
BACKGROUND:
Over 20 million colonoscopies are performed in China annually. An automatic clinical decision support system (CDSS) with accurate semantic recognition of colonoscopy reports and guideline-based is helpful to relieve the increasing medical burden and standardize the healthcare. In this study, the CDSS was built under a hierarchical-label interpretable classification framework, trained by a state-of-the-art transformer-based model, and validated in a multi-center style.
METHODS:
We conducted stratified sampling on a previously established dataset containing 302,965 electronic colonoscopy reports with pathology, identified 2041 patients' records representative of overall features, and randomly divided into the training and testing sets (7:3). A total of five main labels and 22 sublabels were applied to annotate each record on a network platform, and the data were trained respectively by three pre-training models on Chinese corpus website, including bidirectional encoder representations from transformers (BERT)-base-Chinese (BC), the BERT-wwm-ext-Chinese (BWEC), and ernie-3.0-base-zh (E3BZ). The performance of trained models was subsequently compared with a randomly initialized model, and the preferred model was selected. Model fine-tuning was applied to further enhance the capacity. The system was validated in five other hospitals with 3177 consecutive colonoscopy cases.
RESULTS:
The E3BZ pre-trained model exhibited the best performance, with a 90.18% accuracy and a 69.14% Macro-F1 score overall. The model achieved 100% accuracy in identifying cancer cases and 99.16% for normal cases. In external validation, the model exhibited favorable consistency and good performance among five hospitals.
CONCLUSIONS
The novel CDSS possesses high-level semantic recognition of colonoscopy reports, provides appropriate recommendations, and holds the potential to be a powerful tool for physicians and patients. The hierarchical multi-label strategy and pre-training method should be amendable to manage more medical text in the future.
Humans
;
Colonoscopy/methods*
;
Deep Learning
;
Decision Support Systems, Clinical
;
Female
;
Male

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