1.A Case of Aplastic Anemia-Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria with Poor Response to Complement Inhibitor Treatment:Multidisciplinary Diagnostic and Therapeutic Analysis
Juan WU ; Di WU ; Jin XU ; Bing HAN ; Guiren RUAN ; Yindong LIU ; Peipei CHEN ; Miao CHEN ; Min SHEN
JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES 2025;4(2):214-220
A young male patient was diagnosed with aplastic anemia accompanied by paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria(PNH),and achieved only partial remission after immunosuppressive therapy.Over the past year,his anemia worsened,leading to transfusion dependence,which was considered to be caused by active he-molysis of PNH.Despite switching to eculizumab treatment,his anemia continued to deteriorate.A detailed medical history revealed chronic periodontal infection,with periodontal pain,purulent discharge,and fever in the past month.Multidisciplinary discussion suggested that chronic odontogenic infection activating the comple-ment system was the primary cause of aggravated PNH hemolysis,and the acute infection affected the efficacy of eculizumab.Based on multidisciplinary consultation,a treatment plan was formulated,including intravenous antibiotics combined with periodontal irrigation and tooth extraction to control odontogenic infection,while con-tinuing regular eculizumab infusion.The patient's symptoms improved,hemoglobin levels rose rapidly,and he was no longer transfusion-dependent.This case provides an empirical reference for addressing difficulties en-countered in the treatment of rare diseases with new drugs through multidisciplinary collaborative diagnosis and treatment.
2.A Case of Multidisciplinary Treatment for Deficiency of Adenosine Deaminase 2
Jingyuan ZHANG ; Xiaoqi WU ; Jiayuan DAI ; Xianghong JIN ; Yuze CAO ; Rui LUO ; Hanlin ZHANG ; Tiekuan DU ; Xiaotian CHU ; Peipei CHEN ; Hao QIAN ; Pengguang YAN ; Jin XU ; Min SHEN
JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES 2025;4(3):316-324
This case report presents a 16-year-old male patient with deficiency of adenosine deaminase 2(DADA2). The patient had a history of Raynaud′s phenomenon with digital ulcers since childhood. As the disease progressed, the patient developed retinal vasculitis, intracranial hemorrhage, skin necrosis, severe malnutrition, refractory hypertension, and gastrointestinal bleeding. Genetic testing revealed compound heterozygous mutations in the
3.Development and research of an AI-assisted decision-making platform in treatment of insomnia with acupuncture of Tongdu Yangxin acupoint prescription.
Chi WANG ; Chengyong LIU ; Xiaoqiu WANG ; Enqi LIU ; Juguang SUN ; Jin LU ; Min DING ; Wenzhong WU
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(7):881-888
OBJECTIVE:
To construct and validate a predictive model for the therapeutic effect of acupuncture at Tongdu Yangxin prescription (acupoint prescription for promoting the circulation of the governor vessel and nourishing the heart) on insomnia, so as to develop an open-access interactive artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted decision-making platform.
METHODS:
Clinical data of 139 insomnia patients treated with Tongdu Yangxin acupuncture therapy were included. All the patients had received acupuncture at Baihui (GV20), Yintang (GV24+), bilateral Shenmen (HT7), and bilateral Sanyinjiao (SP6); and electric stimulation was attached to Baihui (GV20) and Yintang (GV24+), using a continuous wave and a frequency of 2 Hz. The treatment was delivered once every other day, 3 treatments a week, and for 2 consecutive weeks. Patients with Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) score reduction rate <50% were classified as the "no response group", and those with ≥50% were as the "response group". Outliers were addressed using the 1.5×IQR rule, and missing values were imputed via predictive mean matching. Key features were selected by intersecting the feature importance results from eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) and random forest algorithms. After balancing class distribution using the Synthetic Minority Over-sampling Technique (SMOTE), 20% of the data was reserved as a validation set. The remained data underwent the stratified sampling iterations to generate 200 pairs of 3∶1 training-test sets, which was employed for training and internal validation of 8 machine learning algorithms. The optimal algorithm and data partitioning strategy were selected to construct the final model, followed by external validation. The best-performing model was deployed online via Streamlit to create an interactive AI platform.
RESULTS:
Key predictive features for model construction included insomnia duration, the total PSQI score, PSQI sleep efficiency subscore, the proportion of N1 and N2 sleep stages in total sleep duration, and the maximum pulse rate during sleep. The CatBoost-based model achieved an AUC of 0.92, the average precision of 0.77, and accuracy, average recall, and average F1-score of 0.75 on the test set. On the validation set, it attained an AUC of 0.84, with accuracy, average precision, average recall, and average F1-score all at 0.72, demonstrating robust predictive performance. An interactive AI platform was subsequently developed (https://tdyx-catboost.streamlit.app/).
CONCLUSION
This study successfully establishes and validates a CatBoost-based efficacy prediction model for Tongdu Yangxin acupuncture therapy in treatment of insomnia. The developed AI platform provides data-driven decision support for acupuncture-based insomnia management.
Humans
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/physiopathology*
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Acupuncture Therapy
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Male
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Acupuncture Points
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Female
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Middle Aged
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Adult
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Artificial Intelligence
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Aged
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Young Adult
4.Advances in nanocarrier-mediated cancer therapy: Progress in immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy.
Yue PENG ; Min YU ; Bozhao LI ; Siyu ZHANG ; Jin CHENG ; Feifan WU ; Shuailun DU ; Jinbai MIAO ; Bin HU ; Igor A OLKHOVSKY ; Suping LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(16):1927-1944
Cancer represents a major worldwide disease burden marked by escalating incidence and mortality. While therapeutic advances persist, developing safer and precisely targeted modalities remains imperative. Nanomedicines emerges as a transformative paradigm leveraging distinctive physicochemical properties to achieve tumor-specific drug delivery, controlled release, and tumor microenvironment modulation. By synergizing passive enhanced permeation and retention effect-driven accumulation and active ligand-mediated targeting, nanoplatforms enhance pharmacokinetics, promote tumor microenvironment enrichment, and improve cellular internalization while mitigating systemic toxicity. Despite revolutionizing cancer therapy through enhanced treatment efficacy and reduced adverse effects, translational challenges persist in manufacturing scalability, longterm biosafety, and cost-efficiency. This review systematically analyzes cutting-edge nanoplatforms, including polymeric, lipidic, biomimetic, albumin-based, peptide engineered, DNA origami, and inorganic nanocarriers, while evaluating their strategic advantages and technical limitations across three therapeutic domains: immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy. By assessing structure-function correlations and clinical translation barriers, this work establishes mechanistic and translational references to advance oncological nanomedicine development.
Humans
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Neoplasms/radiotherapy*
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Immunotherapy/methods*
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Nanoparticles/chemistry*
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Animals
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Nanomedicine/methods*
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Drug Delivery Systems/methods*
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Drug Carriers/chemistry*
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Radiotherapy/methods*
5.Consensus on informed consent for orthodontic treatment
Yang CAO ; Bing FANG ; Zuolin JIN ; Hong HE ; Yuxing BAI ; Lin WANG ; Haiping LU ; Zhihe ZHAO ; Tianmin XU ; Weiran LI ; Min HU ; Jinlin SONG ; Jun WANG ; Fang JIN ; Ding BAI ; Xianglong HAN ; Yuehua LIU ; Bin YAN ; Jie GUO ; Jiejun SHI ; Yongming LI ; Zhihua LI ; Xiuping WU ; Jiangtian HU ; Linyu XU ; Lin LIU ; Yi LIU ; Yanqin LU ; Wensheng MA ; Shuixue MO ; Liling REN ; Shuxia CUI ; Yongjie FAN ; Jianguang XU ; Lulu XU ; Zhijun ZHENG ; Peijun WANG ; Rui ZOU ; Chufeng LIU ; Lunguo XIA ; Li HU ; Weicai WANG ; Liping WU ; Xiaoxing KOU ; Jiali TAN ; Yuanbo LIU ; Bowen MENG ; Yuantao HAO ; Lili CHEN
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2025;60(12):1327-1336
This consensus was developed by the Orthodontic Society of the Chinese Stomatological Association to provide a systematic, scientific, and practical guideline for informed consent in orthodontic care. Orthodontic treatment is typically lengthy, highly individualized, and involves multiple factors such as growth and development, occlusal function, and facial esthetics. Rapid technological advances and diverse risk profiles make the traditional reliance on orthodontist experience or institutional templates insufficient to ensure patients′ full understanding and autonomous decision-making. To address this, the expert panel conducted extensive reviews of domestic and international guidelines, analyzed representative dispute cases, and performed multicenter patient-clinician surveys. Using a multi-round Delphi method, the group established a standardized informed consent framework covering the initial consultation, treatment, and retention phases. The consensus emphasizes that informed consent is not only a fundamental legal and ethical requirement but also a key step in building trust, improving patient compliance, and enhancing treatment satisfaction. Orthodontists should clearly and comprehensively explain treatment plans, potential risks, uncertainties, and associated costs, while respecting the autonomy of patients or guardians, and maintain continuous communication and dynamic evaluation throughout the treatment process. The release of this consensus provides unified and authoritative guidance for clinical orthodontics, helping to standardize informed consent, enhance its transparency, safeguard patient rights, reduce medical risks, and promote high-quality, sustainable development of orthodontic practice.
6.Research advances of association between age at natural menopause and diabetes risk: evidence from prospective studies
Meng WANG ; Yunqi GUAN ; Weiwei GONG ; Xiaoyan ZHOU ; Zhimin MA ; Jin PAN ; Mingbin LIANG ; Jieming ZHONG ; Fan WU ; Min YU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2025;46(8):1502-1505
The menopausal age is one of the important menopausal factors, and women of different menopausal ages have different risks of diabetes. This study reviewed the evidence from prospective studies on the association between the age at natural menopause and diabetes risk, both domestically and internationally, and presented its research design and main findings. Advanced menopause, especially premature and early menopause, will increase the risk of diabetes in postmenopausal women. The research on the influence of delayed menopause on the incidence of diabetes is still insufficient. Many factors may modify the association between menopausal age and the risk of diabetes.
7.Guideline for Adult Weight Management in China
Weiqing WANG ; Qin WAN ; Jianhua MA ; Guang WANG ; Yufan WANG ; Guixia WANG ; Yongquan SHI ; Tingjun YE ; Xiaoguang SHI ; Jian KUANG ; Bo FENG ; Xiuyan FENG ; Guang NING ; Yiming MU ; Hongyu KUANG ; Xiaoping XING ; Chunli PIAO ; Xingbo CHENG ; Zhifeng CHENG ; Yufang BI ; Yan BI ; Wenshan LYU ; Dalong ZHU ; Cuiyan ZHU ; Wei ZHU ; Fei HUA ; Fei XIANG ; Shuang YAN ; Zilin SUN ; Yadong SUN ; Liqin SUN ; Luying SUN ; Li YAN ; Yanbing LI ; Hong LI ; Shu LI ; Ling LI ; Yiming LI ; Chenzhong LI ; Hua YANG ; Jinkui YANG ; Ling YANG ; Ying YANG ; Tao YANG ; Xiao YANG ; Xinhua XIAO ; Dan WU ; Jinsong KUANG ; Lanjie HE ; Wei GU ; Jie SHEN ; Yongfeng SONG ; Qiao ZHANG ; Hong ZHANG ; Yuwei ZHANG ; Junqing ZHANG ; Xianfeng ZHANG ; Miao ZHANG ; Yifei ZHANG ; Yingli LU ; Hong CHEN ; Li CHEN ; Bing CHEN ; Shihong CHEN ; Guiyan CHEN ; Haibing CHEN ; Lei CHEN ; Yanyan CHEN ; Genben CHEN ; Yikun ZHOU ; Xianghai ZHOU ; Qiang ZHOU ; Jiaqiang ZHOU ; Hongting ZHENG ; Zhongyan SHAN ; Jiajun ZHAO ; Dong ZHAO ; Ji HU ; Jiang HU ; Xinguo HOU ; Bimin SHI ; Tianpei HONG ; Mingxia YUAN ; Weibo XIA ; Xuejiang GU ; Yong XU ; Shuguang PANG ; Tianshu GAO ; Zuhua GAO ; Xiaohui GUO ; Hongyi CAO ; Mingfeng CAO ; Xiaopei CAO ; Jing MA ; Bin LU ; Zhen LIANG ; Jun LIANG ; Min LONG ; Yongde PENG ; Jin LU ; Hongyun LU ; Yan LU ; Chunping ZENG ; Binhong WEN ; Xueyong LOU ; Qingbo GUAN ; Lin LIAO ; Xin LIAO ; Ping XIONG ; Yaoming XUE
Chinese Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism 2025;41(11):891-907
Body weight abnormalities, including overweight, obesity, and underweight, have become a dual public health challenge in Chinese adults: overweight and obesity lead to a variety of chronic complications, while underweight increases the risks of malnutrition, sarcopenia, and organ dysfunction. To systematically address these issues, multidisciplinary experts in endocrinology, sports science, nutrition, and psychiatry from various regions have held multiple weight management seminars. Based on the latest epidemiological data and clinical evidence, they expanded the guideline to include assessment and intervention strategies for underweight, in addition to the core content of obesity management. This guideline outlines the etiological mechanisms, evaluation methods, and multidimensional management strategies for overweight and obesity, covering key areas such as diagnosis and assessment, medical nutrition therapy, exercise prescription, pharmacological intervention, and psychological support. It is intended to provide a scientific and standardized approach to weight management across the adult population, aiming to curb the rising prevalence of obesity, mitigate complications associated with abnormal body weight, and improve nutritional status and overall quality of life.
8.The predictive value of very low frequency power for the efficacy of vitamin D treatment in children with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome
Tong DONG ; Jin WANG ; Weixia WU ; Yan WANG ; Shaomin NIU ; Xiaojuan YAN ; Li MIN ; Huitao MENG ; Xiangyu DONG
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2025;63(10):1115-1120
Objective:To explore the predictive value of very low frequency (VLF) for the efficacy of vitamin D treatment in children with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS).Methods:A retrospective case-control study was conducted. A total of 65 POTS children from the Department of Pediatrics of the Second Hospital of Lanzhou University from November 2023 to May 2024 were selected as the research subjects, while 102 healthy children from the same period were selected as the control group. The 25 (OH) D levels between POTS children and healthy children were compared. The frequency of eight main symptoms, including palpitations, headache, cold sweat, blurred vision, chest tightness, dizziness, fainting, and digestive discomfort in the POTS group were analyzed, the symptom scores of the orthostatic intolerance were calculated, and the parameters related to short-range heart rate variability (HRV) during the upright test, head-up tilt test (HUTT) were collected. The correlation between 25 (OH) D levels and symptom scores of orthostatic intolerance symptoms and HRV parameters in children with POTS were analyzed by Pearson correlation analysis. The total symptom scores of children with POTS were compared for 3 months before treatment and 2 months after treatment with vitamin D 800 U/d. The difference in score before and after treatment was ≥2 as responsive group, and the score difference before and after treatment was <2 as non-responsive group. The demographic characteristics including age, gender, height, weight, body mass index, as well as HRV parameters such as the standard deviation of nn intervals (SDNN), the standard deviation of the average NN intervals (SDANN), the root mean square of successive differences (rMSSD), low-frequency (LF), high-frequency (HF), very-low-frequency (VLF) were compared between the responsive group and non-responsive group. Multivariate Logistic regression was analyzed to screen independent influencing factors of vitamin D treatment efficacy for POTS. The marker molecules related to the efficacy of vitamin D treatment in children with POTS were analyzed through receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve.Results:A total of 167 children were included in this study. There were 65 children in the POTS group, 38 males and 27 females, with the age of (10.6±2.2) years. There were 102 healthy children in the control group, 53 males and 49 females, with the age of (11.2±1.8) years.There was no statistically significant difference in gender and age between the two groups (both P>0.05). The serum 25 (OH) D level in children in the POTS group was (37±18)nmol/L, lower than that in the control group (61±17)nmol/L ( P<0.05).Pearson correlation analysis showed that serum 25(OH)D was positively correlated with VLF, SDNN and HF ( r=0.43, 0.65, 0.36, respectively, all P<0.05). Among the POTS children, there were 48 cases in responsive group and 17 cases in non-responsive group. Univariate analysis revealed that responsive group exhibited significantly lower values in age, SDNN, SDANN, and VLF compared to the non-responsive group (all P<0.05). Multivariate Logistic regression analysis showed that age ( OR=1.47, 95% CI 1.08-2.01), SDNN ( OR=1.01, 95% CI 1.00-1.22) and VLF ( OR=1.01, 95% CI 1.00-1.15) were independent influencing factors in the effect of vitamin D in POTS children (all P<0.05). ROC curve analysis showed that the area under the curve of VLF predicting response to vitamin D treatment for POTS was 0.72 (95% CI 0.58-0.85, P=0.008). When the cutoff value was 1 272 ms 2, the sensitivity and specificity were both 70%. Conclusion:VLF may help predict the efficacy of vitamin D treatment in children with POTS.
9.STUDY ON EFFICACY OF COCKROACH CONTROL AND PATHOGENIC BACTERIA INFECTION ON AIRCRAFT
Jin-Hui FAN ; Zhi SHI ; Yan-Min QI ; Jian WU ; Xiao-Long ZHANG ; Wei-Nian PENG ; Hai-Feng WANG ; Yin-Juan DUAN ; Li-Li LI ; Jun-Jie HU
Acta Parasitologica et Medica Entomologica Sinica 2025;32(1):22-26
Objective This study aimed to provide an effective scientific basis for prevention and control of cockroaches on aircrafts by identifying cockroach-carried pathogens,and assess the insecticidal efficacy of gel bait mediated cockroach control on aircrafts,to provide technical guidance for aircraft disinsection.Methods Cassette-trapping was used to trap cockroaches,and the carried pathogens were detected using bacterial cultivation techniques.The gel bait mediated killing rate was calculated after 1,7,and 30 d by field application of gel bait.Results A total of 411 cockroaches were captured,and all were identified as Blattella germanica.26 strains of pathogenic bacteria were isolated from the trapped cockroaches.The killing rates of cockroaches were 58.8%-96.3%with 1-30 day application of gel bait.Statistically significant differences were observed in cockroach killing rates on different days(χ2=58.95,P<0.01).Conclusions B.germanica carry a large variety of pathogenic bacteria and opportunistic pathogens and are thus important infectious disease carriers.Gel bait agents have proven to be very effective against cockroaches on aircrafts.
10.Less invasive surfactant administration combined with budesonide in preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome : a clinical research
Bao JIN ; Bin ZHOU ; Min SU ; Jiebing WU ; Yun WANG ; Xin ZHANG ; Bo YANG
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2025;34(6):789-794
Objective:To evaluate the efficacy and safety of less invasive surfactant administration (LISA) combined with budesonide versus the intubation-surfactant-extubation (INSURE) technique in preterm infants (26–32 weeks’ gestation) with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS).Methods:This randomized controlled trial enrolled 136 premature infants with RDS admitted to our NICU between January 2021 and December 2023. Participants were allocated to either the LISA+budesonide group ( n = 70) or the INSURE group ( n = 66). The LISA+budesonide group received surfactant mixed with budesonide via a laryngoscope-guided catheter during noninvasive continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP) ventilation, while the INSURE group underwent endotracheal intubation for surfactant delivery followed by extubation to NCPAP. Outcomes included adverse events during administration, blood gas parameters (PaO 2/FiO 2 [P/F ratio] and PaCO 2 at 1 h and 6 h post-administration), respiratory support duration, oxygen dependency, intubation rates within 72 h, apnea episodes, budesonide-related complications, and incidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Results:The LISA+budesonide group exhibited significantly lower rates of adverse events during administration compared to the INSURE group: regurgitation (10.0% vs. 24.2%; P < 0.05), bradycardia (8.6% vs. 24.2%; P < 0.05), and oxygen desaturation (15.7% vs. 30.3%; P < 0.05). Intubation time did not differ between groups ( P > 0.05).At 1 h and 6 h post-administration, the LISA+budesonide group demonstrated higher P/F ratios ( P < 0.05), with no significant differences in PaCO 2 ( P > 0.05).The LISA+budesonide group required shorter durations of noninvasive respiratory support [(10.4 ± 4.4) d vs. (13.9 ± 5.2) d; P < 0.05] and total oxygen therapy [(15.7 ± 6.2) d vs. (19.2 ± 8.2) d; P < 0.05]. Rates of intubation within 72 h, PS re-administration, apnea episodes, weaning failure, and hospitalization length were comparable ( P > 0.05).BPD incidence was significantly lower in the LISA+budesonide group (10.0% vs. 22.7%; P < 0.05), with no increase in glucocorticoid-related complications ( P > 0.05). Conclusions:In preterm infants (26–32 weeks) with RDS, LISA with budesonide reduces adverse events during surfactant delivery, improves oxygenation, shortens respiratory support duration, and lowers BPD incidence without additional complications compared to INSURE.

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