1.Glucocorticoid Discontinuation in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis under Background of Chinese Medicine: Challenges and Potentials Coexist.
Chuan-Hui YAO ; Chi ZHANG ; Meng-Ge SONG ; Cong-Min XIA ; Tian CHANG ; Xie-Li MA ; Wei-Xiang LIU ; Zi-Xia LIU ; Jia-Meng LIU ; Xiao-Po TANG ; Ying LIU ; Jian LIU ; Jiang-Yun PENG ; Dong-Yi HE ; Qing-Chun HUANG ; Ming-Li GAO ; Jian-Ping YU ; Wei LIU ; Jian-Yong ZHANG ; Yue-Lan ZHU ; Xiu-Juan HOU ; Hai-Dong WANG ; Yong-Fei FANG ; Yue WANG ; Yin SU ; Xin-Ping TIAN ; Ai-Ping LYU ; Xun GONG ; Quan JIANG
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2025;31(7):581-589
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the dynamic changes of glucocorticoid (GC) dose and the feasibility of GC discontinuation in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients under the background of Chinese medicine (CM).
METHODS:
This multicenter retrospective cohort study included 1,196 RA patients enrolled in the China Rheumatoid Arthritis Registry of Patients with Chinese Medicine (CERTAIN) from September 1, 2019 to December 4, 2023, who initiated GC therapy. Participants were divided into the Western medicine (WM) and integrative medicine (IM, combination of CM and WM) groups based on medication regimen. Follow-up was performed at least every 3 months to assess dynamic changes in GC dose. Changes in GC dose were analyzed by generalized estimator equation, the probability of GC discontinuation was assessed using Kaplan-Meier curve, and predictors of GC discontinuation were analyzed by Cox regression. Patients with <12 months of follow-up were excluded for the sensitivity analysis.
RESULTS:
Among 1,196 patients (85.4% female; median age 56.4 years), 880 (73.6%) received IM. Over a median 12-month follow-up, 34.3% (410 cases) discontinued GC, with significantly higher rates in the IM group (40.8% vs. 16.1% in WM; P<0.05). GC dose declined progressively, with IM patients demonstrating faster reductions (median 3.75 mg vs. 5.00 mg in WM at 12 months; P<0.05). Multivariate Cox analysis identified age <60 years [P<0.001, hazard ratios (HR)=2.142, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.523-3.012], IM therapy (P=0.001, HR=2.175, 95% CI: 1.369-3.456), baseline GC dose ⩽7.5 mg (P=0.003, HR=1.637, 95% CI: 1.177-2.275), and absence of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs use (P=0.001, HR=2.546, 95% CI: 1.432-4.527) as significant predictors of GC discontinuation. Sensitivity analysis (545 cases) confirmed these findings.
CONCLUSIONS
RA patients receiving CM face difficulties in following guideline-recommended GC discontinuation protocols. IM can promote GC discontinuation and is a promising strategy to reduce GC dependency in RA management. (Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, No. NCT05219214).
Adult
;
Aged
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/drug therapy*
;
Glucocorticoids/therapeutic use*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Retrospective Studies
2.Syn3, a newly developed cyclic peptide and BDNF signaling enhancer, ameliorates retinal ganglion cell degeneration in diabetic retinopathy.
Ke-Ran LI ; Meng-Jia HUAN ; Jin YAO ; Jia-Jun LI ; Yuan CAO ; Suyu WANG ; Mandar T NAIK ; Yuan FANG ; John MARSHALL ; Chang-Gong LAN ; Cong CAO
Protein & Cell 2024;15(11):858-865
3.Nitro-oleic acid ameliorates erectile dysfunction in a streptozotocin-induced rat model of diabetes by inhibiting oxidative stress and apoptosis and activating the NO/cGMP pathway.
Chang-Bo ZHAO ; Wei-Bo CHEN ; Wen-Zhen WANG ; Fang-Xin GONG ; Cui-Qin FAN ; Ye LI ; Tian LAN ; Wen-Jing WANG ; Ming-Zhen YUAN
Asian Journal of Andrology 2023;26(1):57-66
The major vascular complications associated with diabetes make the management of diabetic mellitus erectile dysfunction (DMED) a challenging endeavor. Notable factors contributing to DMED include oxidative stress, nitric oxide (NO)/cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) pathway activation, and apoptosis, while nitro-oleic acid (NO2-OA) has been shown to be beneficial in treating these aspects of this condition. We, herein, investigated the effects and possible mechanisms of NO2-OA on erectile function as assessed in a streptozotocin-induced rat model of diabetes. Our results revealed that the erectile function of DMED rats was significantly impaired compared with that of the control group. However, in response to 4 weeks of NO2-OA treatment, there was an improvement in erectile function. The expression of oxidative stress-related indicators was significantly increased and the NO/cGMP pathway was impaired in the DMED group. The expression of proapoptotic factors was increased, while that of antiapoptotic factors was decreased in the DMED group. Moreover, the cell morphology in the cavernous tissue of the DMED group also changed adversely. NO2-OA treatment significantly reversed all these changes observed in the DMED group. In conclusion, NO2-OA treatment partially improved erectile function in DMED rats through mechanisms that included inhibition of oxidative stress, activation of the NO/cGMP pathway, and a reduction in apoptosis.
4.Expert consensus on the use of human serum albumin in critically ill patients.
Yue-Tian YU ; Jiao LIU ; Bo HU ; Rui-Lan WANG ; Xiang-Hong YANG ; Xiu-Ling SHANG ; Gang WANG ; Chang-Song WANG ; Bai-Ling LI ; Ye GONG ; Sheng ZHANG ; Xin LI ; Lu WANG ; Min SHAO ; Mei MENG ; Feng ZHU ; You SHANG ; Qiang-Hong XU ; Zhi-Xiong WU ; De-Chang CHEN
Chinese Medical Journal 2021;134(14):1639-1654
5.Kidney transplantation in children: a report of 111 cases
Lan ZHU ; Zhiliang GUO ; Bin LIU ; Fanjun ZENG ; Dunfeng DU ; Sheng CHANG ; Nianqiao GONG ; Changsheng MING ; Weijie ZHANG ; Jipin JIANG ; Zhishui CHEN ; Gang CHEN
Chinese Journal of Organ Transplantation 2020;41(1):3-8
Objective:To summarize the transplant outcomes of pediatric kidney transplantation at a single center and discuss probable measures of improving the outcomes.Methods:A total of 111 pediatric renal transplantation were performed from September 2002 to September 2019. They were divided into adult-donor group ( n=41) and pediatric-donor group ( n=70). Adult-donor group consisted of two subgroups based upon donor sources: living-donor group ( n=19) and deceased-donor group ( n=22). Pediatric-donor group consisted of two subgroups based upon surgical types: single kidney group ( n=48) and en bloc kidney group ( n=22). Clinical data and outcomes of grafts and recipients were retrospectively analyzed. Results:The average age of recipients was (15.6±1.9) years in adult-donor group. None developed delayed graft function (DGF) in living-donor group whereas 6 patients (27.3%) had DGF in deceased-donor group ( P<0.05). During a follow-up period of 22-181 months, 1-year and 5-year graft survivals were 100% vs 94.1% and 93.8% vs 94.1% in living-donor and deceased-donor groups respectively. There were no statistical differences. In pediatric-donor group, the age of donors was significantly lower in en bloc subgroup than that in single kidney subgroup (median: 0.5 vs 6 months, P<0.05). The age of recipients was similar between two subgroups: (9.5±5.3) years in single kidney group vs. 11.5± 1.8 years in en bloc kidney group. In addition, 7 cases of single kidney were transplanted for infant recipients aged under 1 year. Vascular thrombosis occurred in 3 patients (6.3%) of single kidney group, less than that in 5 patients (22.7%) of en bloc kidney group ( P=0.06). During a follow-up period of 4-54 months, 1-year and 2-year graft survivals were 85% and 80% in single kidney group whereas 75% and 70% in en bloc kidney group. However, there was no statistically significant difference. One-year survival was 98% in single kidney group and 95% in en bloc kidney group. Conclusions:For elder pediatric recipients, excellent kidney transplant outcomes may be achieved with grafts from adult donors. For pediatric kidney recipients, transplant outcomes can be further improved with careful assessments and cautious usage of small grafts, particularly those form neonatal donors.
6.Clinical effect of tacrolimus in the treatment of myasthenia gravis in children.
Jiu-Wei LI ; Fang FANG ; Xiao-Tun REN ; Wei-Hua ZHANG ; Xin-Ying YANG ; Chang-Hong REN ; Shuai GONG ; Jun-Lan LYU ; Xiao-Hui WANG ; Xu WANG ; Hu-Sheng WU ; Chang-Hong DING
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2020;22(9):964-969
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of tacrolimus in the treatment of children with myasthenia gravis (MG).
METHODS:
A total of 28 children with MG were treated with tacrolimus. MG-Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL) scale was used to assess clinical outcome and safety after 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months of treatment.
RESULTS:
After tacrolimus treatment, the MG-ADL score at 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months was lower than that at baseline (P<0.05), and the MG-ADL score showed a gradually decreasing trend. The response rates to tacrolimus treatment at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months were 59%, 81%, 84%, 88%, and 88% respectively. At 6, 9, 12, and 18 months of treatment, 4, 13, 14, and 15 children respectively were withdrawn from prednisone. No recurrence was observed during treatment. Major adverse reactions/events were asymptomatic reduction in blood magnesium in 5 children and positive urine occult blood in 1 child, which turned negative without special treatment, and tacrolimus was not stopped due to such adverse reactions/events. One child was withdrawn from tacrolimus due to recurrent vomiting. According to CYP3A5 genotypes, all of the patients were divided into two groups: slow metabolic type (n=19) and non-slow metabolic type (fast metabolic type + intermediate type; n=9). The non-slow metabolism group received a higher dose of tacrolimus, but had a lower trough concentration of tacrolimus than the slow metabolism group (P<0.05). The slow metabolism group had a higher response rates to tacrolimus treatment than the non-slow metabolism group (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Tacrolimus appears to be effective and safe in the treatment of children with MG and is thus an option for immunosuppressive therapy. CYP3A5 genotyping has a certain guiding significance for determining the dosage of tacrolimus.
Activities of Daily Living
;
Child
;
Humans
;
Immunosuppressive Agents
;
Myasthenia Gravis
;
drug therapy
;
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
;
Tacrolimus
;
therapeutic use
7. Discovery and Application of Quality Marker of Traditional Chinese Medicine Based on Integrative Pharmacology
Hai-yu XU ; Wen-bin HOU ; Ke LI ; Ye SHEN ; Shi-huan TANG ; Fei-fei GUO ; Jing-jing ZHANG ; Hong-wei WU ; Ping WANG ; Jin SU ; Rong-rong ZHOU ; Ya-zhuo LI ; Lan WANG ; Lei WANG ; Lei-lei GONG ; Hong-jun YANG ; Chang-xiao LIU
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae 2019;25(6):1-8
Quality marker(Q-marker) is a new concept and pattern for quality control of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM),which will lead the development direction for quality control of TCM.Among them,how to characterize the overall quality attribute of TCM and its biological effect,is a critical scientific problem in the study of Q-marker.In this paper,integrated pharmacology is utilized to screen out and confirm the Q-marker from the complex system of TCM,so as to solve the critical scientific problem.System biology in vivo is firstly applied to establish the correlation of chemical fingerprints of TCM,their metabolic fingerprints,network targets,biological effects and efficacy of TCM,which is used to preliminary screen out Q-marker of TCM.Following that,a pharmacological method in vitro,including intestinal absorption in vitro coupled with bioactivity assessment,is employed to simultaneously determine the absorbed doses of TCM and evaluate their biological activity.Furthermore,data mining is utilized to establish the exact quantitative mathematic model between Q-marker of TCM and bioactivity.Meanwhile,two representative examples,including Yuanhu Zhitong tablets,Xinsuning capsules,are introduced to identify Q-marker of TCM and establish their quality standards related with bioactivity,which will be beneficial to improve the level of quality control of TCM and ensure the effectiveness and safety of clinical applications.
8.Simulation of inter atrial block based on a human atrial model.
Yuan GAO ; Ying-Lan GONG ; Ling XIA ; Ding-Chang ZHENG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2019;20(4):300-309
Inter atrial block (IAB) is a prevailing cardiac conduction abnormality that is under-recognized in clinical practice. IAB has strong association with atrial arrhythmia, left atrial enlargement, and electromechanical discordance, increasing the risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) and myocardial ischemia. IAB was generally believed to be caused by impaired conduction along the Bachmann bundle (BB). However, there are three other conduction pathways, including the fibers posteriorly in the vicinity of the right pulmonary veins (VRPV), transseptal fibers in the fossa ovalis (FO), and muscular bundles on the inferior atrial surface near the coronary sinus (CS). We hypothesized that the importance of BB on IAB might have been overestimated. To test this hypothesis, various combinations of conduction pathway blocks were simulated based on a realistic human atrial model to investigate their effects on the index of clinical diagnosis standard of IAB using a simulated 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG). Firstly, the results showed that the BB block alone could not generate typical P wave morphology of IAB, and that the combination of BB and VRPV pathway block played important roles in the occurrence of IAB. Secondly, although single FO and CS pathways play subordinate roles in inter atrial conduction, their combination with BB and VRPV block could also produce severe IAB. In summary, this simulation study has demonstrated that the combinations of different inter atrial conduction pathways, rather than BB alone, resulted in ECG morphology of IAB. Attention needs to be paid to this in future pathophysiological and clinical studies of IAB.
Adult
;
Arrhythmias, Cardiac/physiopathology*
;
Atrial Fibrillation/physiopathology*
;
Computer Simulation
;
Coronary Sinus/physiopathology*
;
Electrocardiography
;
Heart
;
Heart Atria
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Models, Anatomic
;
Models, Cardiovascular
;
Pulmonary Veins/physiopathology*
9.Comparative study of different biopsy methods of histopathological evaluation on donor kidney
Jianlin CHEN ; Xinqiang WANG ; Jipin JIANG ; Sheng CHANG ; Gang CHEN ; Weijie ZHANG ; Nianqiao GONG ; Lan ZHU ; Xia LU ; Zhishui CHEN ; Hui GUO
Chinese Journal of Organ Transplantation 2018;39(9):522-526
Objective To investigate the value of different biopsy methods for quality evaluation of the donated kidney organ after citizen death.Methods Six cases (6 pairs) of discard donor kidneys were collected from October 2016 to May 2017,respectively,and grouped by wedge biopsy and core needle biopsy.After being fixed and processed for routine paraffin embedding and hematoxylin-eosin (H&E) staining,the specimens were evaluated by the qualified rate of sample,the number of glomerulus,sclerotic glomerulus and small arteries.Results The comparison of two different biopsy methods showed that the number of samples obtained by wedge biopsy was 30.There were 29 samples which were qualified and the qualification rate was 96.7%.The number of samples obtained by core needle biopsy was 30,and only 21 samples were qualified and the qualification rate was 70%.In the wedge biopsy samples,the average number of glomeruli was 22.1 and 6.9 of them were sclerotic glomeruli.The ratio of sclerotic glomeruli was 31.3%.The average number of glomeruli in core needle biopsy samples was 9.5 and 2.1 of them were sclerotic glomeruli.The ratio of sclerotic glomeruli was 22.1 %.The average number of arteries in wedge biopsy samples was 5.4,and that in core needle biopsy samples was 3.9.The results indicated that the qualification rate of wedge biopsy was significantly higher than that of core needle biopsy (P<0.01).The number of glomeruli,sclerotic glomeruli and small arteries in wedge biopsy samples was significantly greater than than in core needle biopsy (P<0.05).Conclusion Wedge biopsy was superior to core needle biopsy for the quality evaluation of specimens and identifying clinically significantly histopathological findings.Thus it is potential for wedge biopsy to become the main method in pre-implantation histopathological evaluation.
10.Electrocardiogram (ECG) patterns of left anterior fascicular block and conduction impairment in ventricular myocardium: a whole-heart model-based simulation study.
Yuan GAO ; Ling XIA ; Ying-Lan GONG ; Ding-Chang ZHENG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2018;19(1):49-56
Left anterior fascicular block (LAFB) is a heart disease identifiable from an abnormal electrocardiogram (ECG). It has been reported that LAFB is associated with an increased risk of heart failure. Non-specific intraventricular conduction delay due to the lesions of the conduction bundles and slow cell to cell conduction has also been considered as another cause of heart failure. Since the location and mechanism of conduction delay have notable variability between individual patients, we hypothesized that the impaired conduction in the ventricular myocardium may lead to abnormal ECGs similar to LAFB ECG patterns. To test this hypothesis, based on a computer model with a three dimensional whole-heart anatomical structure, we simulated the cardiac exciting sequence map and 12-lead ECG caused by the block in the left anterior fascicle and by the slowed conduction velocity in the ventricular myocardium. The simulation results showed that the typical LAFB ECG patterns can also be observed from cases with slowed conduction velocity in the ventricular myocardium. The main differences were the duration of QRS and wave amplitude. In conclusion, our simulations provide a promising starting point to further investigate the underlying mechanism of heart failure with LAFB, which would provide a potential reference for LAFB diagnosis.
Adult
;
Bundle-Branch Block/diagnostic imaging*
;
Computer Simulation
;
Electrocardiography
;
Heart/diagnostic imaging*
;
Heart Atria/diagnostic imaging*
;
Heart Conduction System/physiopathology*
;
Heart Failure/diagnostic imaging*
;
Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging*
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Models, Anatomic
;
Models, Theoretical
;
Muscle Cells
;
Myocardium
;
Phantoms, Imaging
;
Poisson Distribution

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail