1.Analysis of the occurrence and risk factors of microperforations in surgical gloves used in dermatovenereology surgeries
Dan-li TANG ; Wei-na ZHANG ; Yan-yan NIU ; Ai-xiu SHI ; Fei HAN
Journal of Regional Anatomy and Operative Surgery 2025;34(5):444-447
Objective To clarify the occurrence,location distribution,and risk factors of microperforations in surgical gloves used in dermatovenereology surgeries.Methods A total of 898 sterilized surgical gloves worn by right-handed medical staff during dermatovenereology surgeries in Suqian Hospital of Jiangsu Province Hospital from May 2022 to April 2024 were selected as the research objects.The occurrence and location distribution of microperforations in all sterilized surgical gloves after surgery were collected.Univariate analysis and binary Logistic regression analysis were conducted on the factors that might lead to the occurrence of microperforations.Results Among the 898 gloves selected in this study,61 gloves(6.79%)had microperforations;the incidence of microperforations in the gloves worn on the left hand was significantly higher than that in the gloves worn on the right hand(P<0.05);microperforations were prone to occur on the palmar surfaces of the index finger and thumb of the gloves.The results of univariate and binary Logistic regression analyses showed that the use of special instruments,surgery duration≥60 minutes,ingrown nails surgery,and worn by the chief surgeon were the risk factors for the occur-rence of microperforations in sterilized surgical gloves(OR>1,P<0.05),while wearing double-layer gloves was the protective factor to avoid the occurrence of microperforations(OR<1,P<0.05).Conclusion The sterilized surgical gloves are more likely to occur microperforations if involved special instruments in surgery,surgery duration≥60 minutes,and ingrown nails surgery,and worn by the chief surgeon,while wearing double-layer gloves can reduce the incidence of microperforations.
2.Analysis of the occurrence and risk factors of microperforations in surgical gloves used in dermatovenereology surgeries
Dan-li TANG ; Wei-na ZHANG ; Yan-yan NIU ; Ai-xiu SHI ; Fei HAN
Journal of Regional Anatomy and Operative Surgery 2025;34(5):444-447
Objective To clarify the occurrence,location distribution,and risk factors of microperforations in surgical gloves used in dermatovenereology surgeries.Methods A total of 898 sterilized surgical gloves worn by right-handed medical staff during dermatovenereology surgeries in Suqian Hospital of Jiangsu Province Hospital from May 2022 to April 2024 were selected as the research objects.The occurrence and location distribution of microperforations in all sterilized surgical gloves after surgery were collected.Univariate analysis and binary Logistic regression analysis were conducted on the factors that might lead to the occurrence of microperforations.Results Among the 898 gloves selected in this study,61 gloves(6.79%)had microperforations;the incidence of microperforations in the gloves worn on the left hand was significantly higher than that in the gloves worn on the right hand(P<0.05);microperforations were prone to occur on the palmar surfaces of the index finger and thumb of the gloves.The results of univariate and binary Logistic regression analyses showed that the use of special instruments,surgery duration≥60 minutes,ingrown nails surgery,and worn by the chief surgeon were the risk factors for the occur-rence of microperforations in sterilized surgical gloves(OR>1,P<0.05),while wearing double-layer gloves was the protective factor to avoid the occurrence of microperforations(OR<1,P<0.05).Conclusion The sterilized surgical gloves are more likely to occur microperforations if involved special instruments in surgery,surgery duration≥60 minutes,and ingrown nails surgery,and worn by the chief surgeon,while wearing double-layer gloves can reduce the incidence of microperforations.
3.Expert consensus on ethical requirements for artificial intelligence (AI) processing medical data.
Cong LI ; Xiao-Yan ZHANG ; Yun-Hong WU ; Xiao-Lei YANG ; Hua-Rong YU ; Hong-Bo JIN ; Ying-Bo LI ; Zhao-Hui ZHU ; Rui LIU ; Na LIU ; Yi XIE ; Lin-Li LYU ; Xin-Hong ZHU ; Hong TANG ; Hong-Fang LI ; Hong-Li LI ; Xiang-Jun ZENG ; Zai-Xing CHEN ; Xiao-Fang FAN ; Yan WANG ; Zhi-Juan WU ; Zun-Qiu WU ; Ya-Qun GUAN ; Ming-Ming XUE ; Bin LUO ; Ai-Mei WANG ; Xin-Wang YANG ; Ying YING ; Xiu-Hong YANG ; Xin-Zhong HUANG ; Ming-Fei LANG ; Shi-Min CHEN ; Huan-Huan ZHANG ; Zhong ZHANG ; Wu HUANG ; Guo-Biao XU ; Jia-Qi LIU ; Tao SONG ; Jing XIAO ; Yun-Long XIA ; You-Fei GUAN ; Liang ZHU
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2024;76(6):937-942
As artificial intelligence technology rapidly advances, its deployment within the medical sector presents substantial ethical challenges. Consequently, it becomes crucial to create a standardized, transparent, and secure framework for processing medical data. This includes setting the ethical boundaries for medical artificial intelligence and safeguarding both patient rights and data integrity. This consensus governs every facet of medical data handling through artificial intelligence, encompassing data gathering, processing, storage, transmission, utilization, and sharing. Its purpose is to ensure the management of medical data adheres to ethical standards and legal requirements, while safeguarding patient privacy and data security. Concurrently, the principles of compliance with the law, patient privacy respect, patient interest protection, and safety and reliability are underscored. Key issues such as informed consent, data usage, intellectual property protection, conflict of interest, and benefit sharing are examined in depth. The enactment of this expert consensus is intended to foster the profound integration and sustainable advancement of artificial intelligence within the medical domain, while simultaneously ensuring that artificial intelligence adheres strictly to the relevant ethical norms and legal frameworks during the processing of medical data.
Artificial Intelligence/legislation & jurisprudence*
;
Humans
;
Consensus
;
Computer Security/standards*
;
Confidentiality/ethics*
;
Informed Consent/ethics*
4.Efficacy and safety analysis of the zanubrutinib-based bridging regimen in chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy for relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
Yan LU ; Hui LIU ; Shi Guang YE ; Li Li ZHOU ; Xiu LUO ; Xiu Yong DANG ; Xiang Gui YUAN ; Wen Bin QIAN ; Ai Bin LIANG ; Ping LI
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2023;44(10):813-819
Objective: To further elucidate the clinical efficacy and safety of a combination regimen based on the BTK inhibitor zebutanil bridging CD19 Chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-T cells) in the treatment of relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (r/r DLBCL) . Methods: Twenty-one patients with high-risk r/r DLBCL were treated with a zanubrutinib-based regimen bridging CAR-T between June 2020 and June 2023 at the Department of Hematology, Tongji Hospital, Tongji University and the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University, and the efficacy and safety were retrospectively analyzed. Results: All 21 patients were enrolled, and the median age was 57 years (range: 38-76). Fourteen patients (66.7%) had an eastern cooperative oncology group performance status score (ECOG score) of ≥2. Eighteen patients (85.7%) had an international prognostic index (IPI) score of ≥3. Three patients (14.3%) had an IPI score of 2 but had extranodal infiltration. Fourteen patients (66.7%) had double-expression of DLBCL and seven (33.3%) had TP53 mutations. With a median follow-up of 24.8 (95% CI 17.0-31.6) months, the objective response rate was 81.0%, and 11 patients (52.4%) achieved complete remission. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 12.8 months, and the median overall survival (OS) was not reached. The 1-year PFS rate was 52.4% (95% CI 29.8% -74.3%), and the 1-year OS rate was 80.1% (95% CI 58.1% -94.6%). Moreover, 18 patients (85.7%) had grade 1-2 cytokine-release syndrome, and two patients (9.5%) had grade 1 immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome. Conclusion: Zanubrutinib-based combination bridging regimen of CAR-T therapy for r/r DLBCL has high efficacy and demonstrated a good safety profile.
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/therapeutic use*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Immunotherapy, Adoptive/adverse effects*
;
Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse/drug therapy*
;
Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy
;
Antigens, CD19/adverse effects*
5.Bendamustine treatment of Chinese patients with relapsed indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma: a multicenter, open-label, single-arm, phase 3 study.
Yuan-Kai SHI ; Xiao-Nan HONG ; Jian-Liang YANG ; Wei XU ; Hui-Qiang HUANG ; Xiu-Bin XIAO ; Jun ZHU ; Dao-Bin ZHOU ; Xiao-Hong HAN ; Jian-Qiu WU ; Ming-Zhi ZHANG ; Jie JIN ; Xiao-Yan KE ; Wei LI ; De-Pei WU ; Shen-Miao YANG ; Xin DU ; Yong-Qian JIA ; Ai-Chun LIU ; Dai-Hong LIU ; Zhi-Xiang SHEN ; Lian-Sheng ZHANG ; Leonard JAMES ; Edward HELLRIEGEL
Chinese Medical Journal 2021;134(11):1299-1309
BACKGROUND:
Bendamustine was approved in China on May 26th, 2019 by the National Medical Product Administration for the treatment of indolent B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The current study was the registration trial and the first reported evaluation of the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of bendamustine in Chinese adult patients with indolent B-cell NHL following relapse after chemotherapy and rituximab treatment.
METHODS:
This was a prospective, multicenter, open-label, single-arm, phase 3 study (NCT01596621; C18083/3076) with a 2-year follow-up period. Eligible patients received bendamustine hydrochloride 120 mg/m2 infused intravenously on days 1 and 2 of each 21-day treatment cycle for at least six planned cycles (and up to eight cycles). The primary endpoint was the overall response rate (ORR); and secondary endpoints were duration of response (DoR), progression-free survival (PFS), safety, and pharmacokinetics. Patients were classified according to their best overall response after initiation of therapy. Proportions of patients in each response category (complete response [CR], partial response [PR], stable disease, or progressive disease) were summarized along with a two-sided binomial exact 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the ORR.
RESULTS:
A total of 102 patients were enrolled from 20 centers between August 6th, 2012, and June 18th, 2015. At the time of the primary analysis, the ORR was 73% (95% CI: 63%-81%) per Independent Review Committee (IRC) including 19% CR and 54% PR. With the follow-up period, the median DoR was 16.2 months by IRC and 13.4 months by investigator assessment; the median PFS was 18.6 months and 15.3 months, respectively. The most common non-hematologic adverse events (AEs) were gastrointestinal toxicity, pyrexia, and rash. Grade 3/4 neutropenia was reported in 76% of patients. Serious AEs were reported in 29 patients and five patients died during the study. Pharmacokinetic analysis indicated that the characteristics of bendamustine and its metabolites M3 and M4 were generally consistent with those reported for other ethnicities.
CONCLUSION:
Bendamustine is an active and effective therapy in Chinese patients with relapsed, indolent B-cell NHL, with a comparable risk/benefit relationship to that reported in North American patients.
CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION
ClinicalTrials.gov, No. NCT01596621; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01596621.
Adult
;
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
;
Bendamustine Hydrochloride/therapeutic use*
;
China
;
Humans
;
Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/drug therapy*
;
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/drug therapy*
;
Prospective Studies
;
Rituximab/therapeutic use*
6.Systematic Implementation of World Health Organization Family International Classifications in Rehabilitation: Protocol and Roadmap
Jing-yuan JIANG ; Zhuo-ying QIU ; Guo-xiang WANG ; Fu-bing QIU ; Jian YANG ; An-qiao LI ; Hong-zhuo MA ; Ting ZHU ; Mei WANG ; Hong-wei SUN ; Di CHEN ; Qiu-chen HUANG ; Jie-jiao ZHENG ; Ming-sheng ZHANG ; Xiu-e SHI ; Tao TANG ; Tao XU ; Ai-min ZHANG ; Xian-guang WU ; Qiao-yun LIU ; Xiao-fei XIAO ; Qi JING
Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice 2020;26(11):1241-1255
Objective:To explore systematic implementation of World Health Organization Family International Classifications (WHO-FICs) in the field of rehabilitation: the theoretical and policy framework at macro level, governance and management mechanism at meso level, and implementation modules at micro levels, respectively. Methods:The policy and theoretical framework of rehabilitation development was discussed based on the international rehabilitation policy documents of WHO, mainly as World Report on Disability, Global Action Plan on Disability and Rehabilitation in Health Service System. Protocol and roadmap of systematic implementation of WHO-FICs, including International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11), International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), and International Classification of Health Intervention (ICHIβ-2) was proposed. Results:With the use of WHO-FICs, the theoretical and policy framework of rehabilitation was constructed, and the contents and principles of modern rehabilitation services were clarified at macro-level. Rehabilitation is an important part of health service, there are six building blocks: i.e. leadership and governance, financing, human resources for health, service providing, medical technology and health information system. It proposed to use knowledge management system of WHO-FICs, including the classification, nomenclature, definitions, descriptions, terminology and coding systems, to standardize rehabilitation evaluation and statistics. The management and governance system of rehabilitation should be implemented using WHO-FICs. Rehabilitation services are based on the bio-psycho-social model and implemented the principles of people-centered and functioning-oriented. The systematic implementation of WHO-FICs in rehabilitation abide by the model of "Evaluation (ICHI)-Evaluation, Description, Classification and Coding of Functioning (ICF)-Disease Classification, Diagnosis and Coding (ICD)-Rehabilitation Intervention (ICHI)", and with the standardized process of "Evaluation (Functioning and unmet needs)-Diagnose (Disease and Functioning)-Planning of Rehabilitation-Intervention-Evaluation of Outcome". The mic-modules of implementation of WHO-FICs in rehabilitation had been constructed. There were 28 categories of diseases, 7 categories of functioning and 6 categories of rehabilitation interventions in rehabilitation proposed by International Society of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine. According to ICD-11 and ICF, it proposed to use WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS 2.0), Brief Model Disability Survey (MDS-B) and VB40 Generic Functioning Domains (VB40), and the ICF core-sets in evaluation of functioning and rehabilitation outcome. The implementation of WHO-FICs in management of medical records and reporting realized the standardized management of medical record, encoding of diseases, functioning and intervention, reporting of performance, and provided tools for billing, reimbursement and payment management of rehabilitation. It proposed to develop WHO-FICs based clinical data sets and big data to implement functioning-related Diagnosis Related Groups and case-mix statistics. Conclusion:With the systematic implementation of WHO-FICs in rehabilitation, the policy and theoretical framework at macro level had been developed. The mechanism of management and governance at meso level had been explored. The application modules and approaches at micro level had been established. A scientific and effective overall solution had been proposed to enhance the scientific, standardized, refined and informatization level, strengthen the level and governance capacity, and improve the quality, safety and the coverage of rehabilitation services.
7.WHO Rehabilitation in Health System: Background, Framework and Approach, Contents and Implementation
Zhuo-ying QIU ; Joseph Kin Fun KWOK ; Lun LI ; Pui-yu LEUNG ; Xian-guang WU ; Di CHEN ; Hong-wei SUN ; Guo-xiang WANG ; Jie-jiao ZHENG ; Xiu-e SHI ; Jun LÜ ; Ai-min ZHANG ; Hong-zhuo MA
Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice 2020;26(1):16-20
This paper explored the background, framework and approach, contents and implementation of WHO Rehabilitation in Health System using approaches of ICF and WHO Handbook for Guideline Development. The actions and significances of implementations of seven recommendations and one good practice statements on assistive products had been discussed.
8.Research on Rehabilitation Guidelines Using World Health Organization Family International Classifications Framework and Approaches
Zhuo-ying QIU ; Lun LI ; Di CHEN ; Hong-zhuo MA ; Hong-wei SUN ; Guo-xiang WANG ; Zhao-ming HUANG ; Ming-sheng ZHANG ; Jie-jiao ZHENG ; Xiu-e SHI ; Shao-pu WANG ; An-qiao LI ; Xiao-fei XIAO ; Qi JING ; Xian-guang WU ; Ai-min ZHANG ; Hao-ran LI
Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice 2020;26(2):125-135
Objective To use World Health Organization Family International Classifications (WHO-FICs) to explore the framework and approaches of development and research of guidelines of rehabilitation at levels of policies, community and services.Methods The important documents and tools of rehabilitation at international level, including United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, WHO World Report on Disability, Community-based Rehabilitation Guideline, Rehabilitation in Health Service System, and International Classification of Diseases (ICD), International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), and International Classification of Health Intervention (ICHI) of WHO-FICs, had been discussed.Results The framework, classifications, diagnosis and description of diseases and functioning, coding, intervention and functioning evaluation based on ICD-11, ICF and ICHI-β-2 had been established for development and implementation of rehabilitation guidelines and Cochrane rehabilitation.Conclusion The framework and systematic approaches of ontology, classification, terminology, coding, diagnosis and description of diseases and functioning, interventions and evaluations for the development and implementation of rehabilitation guidelines had been developed.
9.Effects of the pestle needle therapy, a type of acupoint stimulation, on post-hemorrhoidectomy pain: A randomized controlled trial.
Xian WANG ; Xuan YIN ; Xiu-Tian GUO ; Yan WANG ; Wen-Qi JIN ; Ai-Jun MAO ; Lixing LAO ; Zhang-Jin ZHANG ; Jie ZHANG ; Shi-Fen XU
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2020;18(6):492-498
BACKGROUND:
Hemorrhoids are one of the most common conditions that lead to surgery, and until now surgical hemorrhoidectomy has been the major effective treatment. Post-operative pain from hemorrhoidectomy has been experienced by thousands of patients and remains a major inconvenience of the operation.
OBJECTIVE:
This study evaluates the clinical efficacy of the pestle needle therapy, an acupoint stimulation method, for relief of post-hemorrhoidectomy pain.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTIONS:
This was a single-center, patient-assessor-blinded and randomized controlled trial with 154 patients receiving Milligan hemorrhoidectomy surgery. Eligible patients were randomly assigned to either a treatment group or a control group at a ratio of 1:1. The treatment group received the pestle needle therapy, with manual stimulation at Yaoshu (DU2), Mingmen (DU4), Changqiang (DU1), Chengshan (BL57), Erbai (EX-UE2) and the perianal points (1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11o'clock around the lesion); while the control group received a sham treatment with very light pressure. Three sessions of treatment were performed at 30 min, 4 h and 12 h after the surgery, and each lasted for 15 min.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
The primary outcome was post-operative pain measured with the visual analogue scale (VAS) at 12 h after surgery. The secondary outcomes included the VAS scores measured at 0.5, 2, 4, 6, 8, 24 and 48 h after surgery, the analgesic dose, the time and the VAS score of the patients' first defecation after surgery, as well as the Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety (HAMA) evaluated before discharge.
RESULTS:
The mean pain score of the treatment group was significantly lower than that of the control group (3.10 ± 1.27 vs 4.82 ± 1.29; P < 0.001) at 12 h after surgery. Compared with the control group, patients in the treatment group needed a smaller dose of analgesic within the first 24 hours after surgery (P = 0.002); and their HAMA scores before discharge were lower (4.07 ± 2.40 vs 5.10 ± 2.45, P = 0.009). Compared to the treatment group, patients in the control group had a greater time to the first defecation after surgery ([52.34 ± 15.72] h vs [27.08 ± 13.68] h; P < 0.001), but there was no difference in their VAS scores at the first defecation (P = 0.092).
CONCLUSION
The pestle needle therapy was effective for relieving pain, reducing anxiety and improving bowel function after hemorrhoidectomy, and it is worthy of clinical application.
10.Preparation and in vitro performance evaluation of doxorubicin loaded lipid calcium phosphate nanoparticles with shell-core structure
Jian-xiu XUE ; Hong-shu BI ; Yu-ai LI ; Yao CHEN ; Xiao-qing LIU ; Zheng-qi XU ; Hu-wei PAN ; Kai SHI
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2018;53(8):1364-1370
As an important drug carrier, liposome has the advantages of high biocompatibility and low immunogenicity. It has been widely used in the field of drug delivery, especially the targeted treatment of tumors. However, traditional liposomes are composed of flowing dynamic phospholipid membranes, which are easy to fuse together, resulting in aggregation and drug leakage. In addition, the lower degree of polyethylene glycol (PEG) modification also limits the targeted delivery performance of the vector in vivo. In view of the problems, a nanoparticle-targeted drug delivery system combining the inorganic carrier calcium phosphate with liposomes was designed, namely lipid calcium phosphate (LCP). Using doxorubicin (DOX) as a model drug, doxorubicin-loaded lipid calcium phosphate nanoparticles (DOX/LCP) were prepared by reverse microemulsion method, and the preparation conditions were investigated. The structure and morphology of calcium phosphate cores were observed by infrared spectroscopy, EDS spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. The particle size, encapsulation efficiency, drug loading, stability and release behavior in vitro of DOX/LCP were investigated. Confocal microscopy and flow cytometry were used to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate the uptake of DOX in drug-resistant tumor cell line MCF-7/DOX by LCP, respectively, and the thiazolium MTT colorimetric method was used to examine its cytotoxicity. LCP exhibited a typical core-shell structure with good size uniformity and dispersibility. The particle size was in (48.6 ±3.9) nm, the potential was in (−12.1 ±1.2) mV, and the encapsulation efficiency was above 80%. Moreover, it has a good stability in simulated plasma. In vitro release of LCP had a significant pH dependence. When the pH of the environment was 7.4, the cumulative release within 24 hours was less than 20%; as the pH of the release medium decreases, the release rate of DOX/LCP was accelerated gradually. Accumulated release over 24 hours exceeded 90% in the pH 4.5 medium. LCP significantly promoted the uptake and accumulation of DOX by drug-resistant cells, and the inhibition rate of drug-resistant tumors was significantly increased in vitro. The half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) of LCP/DOX and free DOX were 4.6 and 11.8 μg·mL−1, respectively, and there was a significant difference between the two groups (P < 0.05). In summary, the LCP prepared in this study had a small particle size, high encapsulation efficiency and good stability. It had environmental responsiveness and potential inhibition of tumor drug resistance, which suggests a potential in the clinical application.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail