1.Evaluating a 3D-printed biodegradable paclitaxel-eluting stent for biliary stricture management after liver transplantation: An in vivo porcine study
Jiyoung KIM ; YoungRok CHOI ; Joon Koo HAN ; Jae Hyun KIM ; Dong-Heon HA ; Eui Soo HAN ; Jiwon KOH ; Jae-Yoon KIM ; Jaewon LEE ; Hyun Hwa CHOI ; Su young HONG ; Jeong-Moo LEE ; Suk Kyun HONG ; Kwang-Woong LEE
Annals of Liver Transplantation 2025;5(2):89-97
Background:
Liver transplantation (LT) is the standard treatment for end-stage liver disease; however, it can lead to biliary strictures in 25%–30% of cases. We aimed to develop a biodegradable stent loaded with paclitaxel that could be inserted during surgery without requiring removal. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of this stent using a porcine model.
Methods:
Fourteen pigs underwent simulated ischemic injury during LT, and a biodegradable paclitaxel-eluting stent was inserted after duct-to-duct anastomosis.Pigs were divided into four groups: no stent (n=3), bare stent (n=3), 300 µg paclitaxel stent (n=4), and 900 µg paclitaxel stent (n=4). After 3 months of follow-up, autopsies were conducted to obtain common bile duct tissue samples, and inflammation and fibrosis thicknesses were assessed under a microscope.
Results:
Most tissues had resolved the inflammatory reactions by the 3-month mark. The thinnest fibrosis thickness was observed in the 900 µg group (359.08±167.23 µm); however, no statistical significance was observed.
Conclusion
This study demonstrated the safety of paclitaxel-eluting biodegradable biliary stents and their positive effects on fibrosis in an ischemic bile duct porcine model. This biodegradable stent represents a potential approach for overcoming the complications associated with biliary strictures after LT.
2.Injury rates and work-related diseases following workforce reduction among South Korean on-site workers in basic local governments between 2016 and 2018
Dongwhan SUH ; Nahyun KIM ; Han-Na JUNG ; Woo Chul JEONG ; Hyunjoo KIM
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2025;37(1):e17-
Background:
South Korean on-site workers in the public sector, fully covered by the Occupational Safety and Health Act, often perform hazardous tasks. However, their status and injury rates remain poorly documented. This study aimed to analyze changes in injury rates and the proportion of work-related diseases (WRDs) among on-site workers in basic local governments (BLGs) following workforce reductions between 2016 and 2018.
Methods:
Data from two sources provided by the Ministry of Employment and Labor were analyzed: organizational data on the number of on-site workers, and cases of injuries, deaths, and diseases among on-site workers in 226 BLGs from 2016 to 2018; and workers’ compensation claims data (individual data) for on-site workers in BLGs during the same period. Injury, mortality, and disease incidence rates were calculated and compared between BLGs with increased and decreased workforce. The proportion of WRDs among all the injuries was also examined.
Results:
The total number of on-site workers in BLGs decreased by 18.1% in 2018 compared with 2016. The injury rate increased from 0.46% in 2016 to 0.62% in 2018. BLGs with workforce reductions showed higher injury rates, particularly in those with fewer than 1,000 on-site workers. The proportion of WRDs among all injuries increased by 1.34 times in 2018 compared with 2016.
Conclusions
Workforce reductions among on-site workers in BLGs are associated with higher injury rates and a great proportion of WRDs. These findings highlight the need for improved occupational safety and health practices within the public sector and serve as an important basis for establishing workforce management and injury prevention policies. However, limitations in the available data made it challenging to identify worker groups particularly vulnerable to WRDs. Further research is needed, as it is critical for the development of effective occupational safety and health policies.
3.Acute dual therapeutic effects of the BKCa channel opener LDD175 on erectile dysfunction and lower urinary tract symptoms in chronic pelvic ischemia: a preliminary study.
Jiwoong YU ; Mee Ree CHAE ; Deok Hyun HAN ; Su Jeong KANG ; Jimin SHIN ; Hyun Hwan SUNG
Asian Journal of Andrology 2025;27(6):714-722
Recent studies have revealed a significant relationship between erectile dysfunction (ED) and lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), both of which commonly affect middle-aged and older men. These conditions share underlying causes, particularly endothelial dysfunction, atherosclerosis, and chronic pelvic ischemia (CPI). This study investigated the therapeutic potential of LDD175, a large-conductance Ca 2+ -activated K + channel (BKCa channel) opener, in simultaneously treating both conditions using a CPI animal model of male Sprague Dawley rats. Our study investigated the induction of CPI through surgical endothelial damage combined with a high-cholesterol diet. We assessed erectile and voiding functions by measuring intracavernosal pressure (ICP) and intraurethral pressure (IUP), respectively, after nerve stimulation. We performed histological examinations of vascular changes and western blot analyses of cavernous and prostate tissues to understand the underlying mechanisms. This study evaluated the effectiveness of LDD175 compared to standard treatments, such as sildenafil for ED and tamsulosin for LUTS. Therefore, the CPI model successfully demonstrated ED and LUTS symptoms with decreased ICP and increased IUP. Analysis revealed elevated levels of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α, transforming growth factor-β1 and β2 in cavernous tissue, and increased α1A-adrenoceptor expression in prostate tissue. LDD175 administration showed promising results, with dose-dependent improvements in ICP and IUP, and therapeutic effects comparable to those of established treatments. Our findings suggest a novel therapeutic approach that can simultaneously address ED and LUTS, opening new possibilities for clinical application in the treatment of these interconnected conditions.
Male
;
Animals
;
Erectile Dysfunction/etiology*
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/etiology*
;
Ischemia/drug therapy*
;
Rats
;
Tamsulosin
;
Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit/drug effects*
;
Sildenafil Citrate/therapeutic use*
;
Penis/blood supply*
;
Disease Models, Animal
;
Transforming Growth Factor beta1/metabolism*
;
Pelvis/blood supply*
;
Prostate/metabolism*
;
Sulfonamides/therapeutic use*
;
Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/agonists*
4.Clinical Exome-Based Redefinition and Reclassification of Retinitis Pigmentosa
Hyo Song PARK ; Kyung KIM ; Dongwook LEE ; Jong-Young LEE ; Jeong Nam CHOI ; Jin Ha KIM ; Jung Woo HAN ; Tae Kwann PARK
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2025;40(16):e54-
Background:
Because of the low prevalence of inherited retinal diseases, reports on the distribution of retinitis pigmentosa (RP)-related genes in Korean patients are scarce. The aim of this study was to determine the mutation spectrum and allele frequency and observe the final diagnoses in a Korean cohort clinically diagnosed with RP.
Methods:
We used whole-exome sequencing (WES) to analyze a Korean cohort of 100 unrelated patients clinically diagnosed with RP. The possible pathogenicity of each variant was assessed based on the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and Association for Molecular Pathology, in-silico prediction tools, known clinical phenotypes, and inheritance patterns.
Results:
Definite causative genes were detected in 60/100 patients (60.0%). Of these 60 cases, USH2A was the most common causative gene (14/60, 23.3%), followed by EYS (13/60, 21.7%) and RP1 (6/60, 10.0%). The clinical diagnosis was redefined in 9 of the 60 probands (15.0%) with causative genes after WES. Five of the 60 patients (8.3%) carried a causative variant in CHM, and the clinical diagnosis was redefined as choroideremia. Leber congenital amaurosis was diagnosed in 2/60 probands (3.3%), and RDH12 and RPGRIP1 were the causative genes in each patient. One patient (1/60, 1.7%) was diagnosed with Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, with CYP4V2 identified as the causative gene. In another patient (1/60, 1.7%), ABCA4 variants were detected with clinical findings suggestive of cone-rod dystrophy.
Conclusion
This study reports the mutational spectrum of a cohort of Korean patients with a clinical diagnosis of RP who were referred for genetic testing. This study adds valuable data regarding the frequency of genes as well as their relation to the age of symptom onset and relation to other inherited retinal degenerations.
5.Creating a Practical Tool for Predicting Major Amputation Rate in Patients With Diabetic Hindfoot Ulcers: Focus on Ischemia and Infection
Ye-Won CHOI ; Seung-Kyu HAN ; Seong-Ho JEONG ; Eun-Sang DHONG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2025;40(17):e55-
Background:
Patients with diabetic hindfoot ulcers typically harbor significant concerns regarding their prospects for healing or the potential for major amputation. Nonetheless, a scarcity of data addressing this prevalent and critical query exists. Thus, the aim of this study was to create an initial risk-scoring system to forecast the prognosis of individuals with diabetic hindfoot ulcers, leveraging assessments of ischemia and infection severity, which are recognized as the principal risk factors for amputation.
Methods:
Ischemia severity was categorized as iS0, iS1, or iS2 based on transcutaneous partial oxygen tension values, while infection severity was classified as iN0, iN1, or iN2 according to the results of tissue and bone biopsy cultures. Risk scores were determined by summing the scores for ischemia and infection severity, yielding a range of 0 to 4. Wound healing outcomes were graded as either healed with or without major amputation. Wound healing outcomes were assessed based on the assigned risk scores.
Results:
With ascending risk scores, the proportion of patients subjected to major amputation also increased (P value for trend < 0.001). Univariable logistic regression analysis revealed a significant positive correlation between escalating risk scores and major amputation incidence. Patients with a risk score of 4 exhibited a 41-fold higher likelihood of undergoing major amputation compared to those with a risk score of 0.
Conclusion
Risk scores can serve as a reliable predictor of the major amputation rate in patients with diabetic hindfoot ulcers.
6.Clinical Exome-Based Redefinition and Reclassification of Retinitis Pigmentosa
Hyo Song PARK ; Kyung KIM ; Dongwook LEE ; Jong-Young LEE ; Jeong Nam CHOI ; Jin Ha KIM ; Jung Woo HAN ; Tae Kwann PARK
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2025;40(16):e54-
Background:
Because of the low prevalence of inherited retinal diseases, reports on the distribution of retinitis pigmentosa (RP)-related genes in Korean patients are scarce. The aim of this study was to determine the mutation spectrum and allele frequency and observe the final diagnoses in a Korean cohort clinically diagnosed with RP.
Methods:
We used whole-exome sequencing (WES) to analyze a Korean cohort of 100 unrelated patients clinically diagnosed with RP. The possible pathogenicity of each variant was assessed based on the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and Association for Molecular Pathology, in-silico prediction tools, known clinical phenotypes, and inheritance patterns.
Results:
Definite causative genes were detected in 60/100 patients (60.0%). Of these 60 cases, USH2A was the most common causative gene (14/60, 23.3%), followed by EYS (13/60, 21.7%) and RP1 (6/60, 10.0%). The clinical diagnosis was redefined in 9 of the 60 probands (15.0%) with causative genes after WES. Five of the 60 patients (8.3%) carried a causative variant in CHM, and the clinical diagnosis was redefined as choroideremia. Leber congenital amaurosis was diagnosed in 2/60 probands (3.3%), and RDH12 and RPGRIP1 were the causative genes in each patient. One patient (1/60, 1.7%) was diagnosed with Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, with CYP4V2 identified as the causative gene. In another patient (1/60, 1.7%), ABCA4 variants were detected with clinical findings suggestive of cone-rod dystrophy.
Conclusion
This study reports the mutational spectrum of a cohort of Korean patients with a clinical diagnosis of RP who were referred for genetic testing. This study adds valuable data regarding the frequency of genes as well as their relation to the age of symptom onset and relation to other inherited retinal degenerations.
7.Creating a Practical Tool for Predicting Major Amputation Rate in Patients With Diabetic Hindfoot Ulcers: Focus on Ischemia and Infection
Ye-Won CHOI ; Seung-Kyu HAN ; Seong-Ho JEONG ; Eun-Sang DHONG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2025;40(17):e55-
Background:
Patients with diabetic hindfoot ulcers typically harbor significant concerns regarding their prospects for healing or the potential for major amputation. Nonetheless, a scarcity of data addressing this prevalent and critical query exists. Thus, the aim of this study was to create an initial risk-scoring system to forecast the prognosis of individuals with diabetic hindfoot ulcers, leveraging assessments of ischemia and infection severity, which are recognized as the principal risk factors for amputation.
Methods:
Ischemia severity was categorized as iS0, iS1, or iS2 based on transcutaneous partial oxygen tension values, while infection severity was classified as iN0, iN1, or iN2 according to the results of tissue and bone biopsy cultures. Risk scores were determined by summing the scores for ischemia and infection severity, yielding a range of 0 to 4. Wound healing outcomes were graded as either healed with or without major amputation. Wound healing outcomes were assessed based on the assigned risk scores.
Results:
With ascending risk scores, the proportion of patients subjected to major amputation also increased (P value for trend < 0.001). Univariable logistic regression analysis revealed a significant positive correlation between escalating risk scores and major amputation incidence. Patients with a risk score of 4 exhibited a 41-fold higher likelihood of undergoing major amputation compared to those with a risk score of 0.
Conclusion
Risk scores can serve as a reliable predictor of the major amputation rate in patients with diabetic hindfoot ulcers.
8.Clinicopathological Correlations of Neurodegenerative Diseases in the National Brain Biobank of Korea
Young Hee JUNG ; Jun Pyo KIM ; Hee Jin KIM ; Hyemin JANG ; Hyun Jeong HAN ; Young Ho KOH ; Duk L. NA ; Yeon-Lim SUH ; Gi Yeong HUH ; Jae-Kyung WON ; Seong-Ik KIM ; Ji-Young CHOI ; Sang Won SEO ; Sung-Hye PARK ; Eun-Joo KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2025;21(3):190-200
Background:
and Purpose The National Brain Biobank of Korea (NBBK) is a brain bank consortium supported by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency and the Korea National Institute of Health, and was launched in 2015 to support research into neurodegenerative disease dementia (NDD). This study aimed to introduce the NBBK and describes clinicopathological correlations based on analyses of data collected from the NBBK.
Methods:
Four hospital-based brain banks have been established in South Korea: Samsung Medical Center Brain Bank (SMCBB), Seoul National University Hospital Brain Bank (SNUHBB), Pusan National University Hospital Brain Bank (PNUHBB), and Myongji Hospital Brain Bank (MJHBB). Clinical and pathological data were collected from these brain banks using standardized protocols. The prevalence rates of clinical and pathological diagnoses were analyzed in order to characterize the clinicopathological correlations.
Results:
Between August 2016 and December 2023, 185 brain specimens were collected and pathologically evaluated (SNUHBB: 117; PNUHBB: 27; SMCBB: 34; MJHBB: 7). The age at consent was 70.8±12.6 years, and the age at autopsy was 71.7±12.4 years. The four-most-common clinical diagnoses were Alzheimer’s disease (AD) dementia (20.0%), idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (15.1%), unspecified dementia (11.9%), and cognitively unimpaired (CU) (11.4%).Most cases of unspecified dementia had a pathological diagnosis of central nervous system (CNS) vasculopathy (31.8%) or AD (31.8%). Remarkably, only 14.2% of CU cases had normal pathological findings. The three-most-common pathological diagnoses were AD (26.5%), CNS vasculopathy (14.1%), and Lewy body disease (13.5%).
Conclusions
These clinical and neuropathological findings provide a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying NDD in South Korea.
9.Impact of RNF213 Polymorphism in Isolated Intracranial Arterial Steno-Occlusive Disease
Dong Young JEONG ; Bum Joon KIM ; Jae Han BAE ; Chulhong KIM ; Sun U KWON
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2025;21(3):173-181
Background:
and Purpose To determine whether the RNF213 p.R4810K mutation modifies the number of moyamoya disease manifestations and recurrent strokes in isolated intracranial arterial steno-occlusive disease (ICAD).
Methods:
This retrospective case–control study analyzed patients who visited the Asan Medical Center with steno-occlusive lesions in the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery and terminal internal carotid artery, and underwent RNF213 genetic testing for screening moyamoya disease between January 2010 and November 2022. Patients with supportive findings of moyamoya disease or moderate-to-severe stenosis in the extracranial arteries were excluded.After matching antiplatelet drugs, the presentation of moyamoya disease and stroke recurrence were analyzed using chi-squared analysis and Kaplan–Meier survival curve analysis.
Results:
The 1,567 patients who underwent evaluations of RNF213 polymorphisms included 753 with ICAD, among whom females predominated (n=452, 60.0%) and 289 (38.4%) had an RNF213 mutation. The follow-up period was 2.47±3.51 years (mean±standard deviation; median=1.00 year, interquartile range=0–4 years). The risk of progression to moyamoya disease was higher in the RNF213-related-vasculopathy group than the RNF213-negative stenosis group (n=27 [9.3%] versus n=6 [1.3%], p<0.01), as were the risks of ischemic stroke (n=13 [4.5%] versus n=7 [1.5%], p=0.01) and hemorrhagic stroke (n=5 [1.7%] versus n=1 [0.2%], p=0.02, respectively). Furthermore, the presence of an RNF213 mutation was significantly associated with the risk of stroke recurrence (odds ratio=2.34, 95% confidence interval=1.44–3.80, p< 0.01).
Conclusions
Evaluations of RNF213 polymorphisms may help to identify patients with isolated ICAD at a high risk of progression to moyamoya disease and stroke.
10.Eligibility for Lecanemab Treatment in the Republic of Korea:Real-World Data From Memory Clinics
Sung Hoon KANG ; Jee Hyang JEONG ; Jung-Min PYUN ; Geon Ha KIM ; Young Ho PARK ; YongSoo SHIM ; Seong-Ho KOH ; Chi-Hun KIM ; Young Chul YOUN ; Dong Won YANG ; Hyuk-je LEE ; Han LEE ; Dain KIM ; Kyunghwa SUN ; So Young MOON ; Kee Hyung PARK ; Seong Hye CHOI
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2025;21(3):182-189
Background:
and Purpose We aimed to determine the proportion of Korean patients with early Alzheimer’s disease (AD) who are eligible to receive lecanemab based on the United States Appropriate Use Recommendations (US AUR), and also identify the barriers to this treatment.
Methods:
We retrospectively enrolled 6,132 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment or mild amnestic dementia at 13 hospitals from June 2023 to May 2024. Among them, 2,058 patients underwent amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) and 1,199 (58.3%) of these patients were amyloid-positive on PET. We excluded 732 patients who did not undergo brain magnetic resonance imaging between June 2023 and May 2024. Finally, 467 patients were included in the present study.
Results:
When applying the criteria of the US AUR, approximately 50% of patients with early AD were eligible to receive lecanemab treatment. Among the 467 included patients, 36.8% did not meet the inclusion criterion of a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score of ≥22.
Conclusions
Eligibility for lecanemab treatment was not restricted to Korean patients with early AD except for those with an MMSE score of ≥22. The MMSE criteria should therefore be reconsidered in areas with a higher proportion of older people, who tend to have lower levels of education.

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