1.Predictors and patterns of early liver regeneration after major hepatectomy
Seoyeong KU ; Garam LEE ; Hyung Hwan MOON ; Hyungjune KU ; Won Jong YANG ; Junho SONG ; Suyeon KIM ; Chol Min KANG ; Amy CHOI ; Dong Hyeon GIM ; Young Il CHOI ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Namkee OH ; Jinsoo RHU
Kosin Medical Journal 2026;41(1):58-66
Background:
Postoperative liver regeneration is essential for maintaining hepatic function. This study evaluated the rate, determinants, and volumetric patterns of early liver regeneration after hemihepatectomy.
Methods:
A retrospective review was conducted of 50 patients who underwent right or left hemihepatectomy between April 2019 and March 2025. Liver and spleen volumes (SV) were assessed preoperatively, at postoperative day (POD) 1 week, and at POD 3 months. Early liver regeneration rate (LRR) was defined as the percentage increase in remnant liver volume at POD 1 week relative to the preoperative future liver remnant (FLR), and patients were categorized into low (<50%) and high (≥50%) LRR groups. Clinical, biochemical, and volumetric variables were compared, and predictors of regeneration were identified using multivariable analyses. Regeneration patterns were also examined according to whether the FLR/standard liver volume (SLV) ratio was <50% or ≥50%.
Results:
FLR/SLV was the strongest independent predictor of rapid early liver regeneration (p<0.001). Remnants with FLR/SLV <50% exhibited rapid and sustained regeneration, whereas those with FLR/SLV ≥50% showed slower regrowth that plateaued after reaching approximately 90% of SLV. SV increased at POD 1 week in all patients; however, only the FLR/SLV ≥50% group showed a reduction by POD 3 months, whereas the <50% group maintained elevated volumes.
Conclusions
FLR/SLV reliably predicts early postoperative liver regeneration. Smaller remnants regenerate more rapidly, whereas persistent splenic enlargement suggests a sustained portal hemodynamic burden. Combined evaluation of FLR/SLV and SV may enhance perioperative risk assessment and surgical planning.
2.Vitamin/mineral and non-vitamin/ non-mineral supplement use of breast cancer survivors in Korea
Jioh KANG ; Jiyoung YOUN ; Hyun Jeong CHO ; Hyeong-Gon MOON ; Dong-Young NOH ; So-Youn JUNG ; Eun Sook LEE ; Zisun KIM ; Hyun Jo YOUN ; Jihyoung CHO ; Young Bum YOO ; Se Kyung LEE ; Jeong Eon LEE ; Seok Jin NAM ; Jun Won MIN ; Yoo Seok KIM ; Jihyoun LEE ; Seho PARK ; Joon JEONG ; Jung Eun LEE
Nutrition Research and Practice 2026;20(2):333-345
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES:
Dietary supplement use is common among breast cancer survivors, but studies on Asian populations remain limited. This study investigated dietary supplement use among Korean breast cancer survivors, distinguishing between vitamin/ mineral (VM) and non-vitaminon-mineral (NVNM) supplements.
SUBJECTS/METHODS:
This cross-sectional study included 1,136 stage I–III breast cancer survivors from 12 Korean hospitals, who survived more than 6 mon post-surgery. The participants completed a questionnaire on post-diagnostic dietary supplement use. Stepwise logistic regression was applied, calculating odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) to identify the demographic and clinical factors associated with VM and NVNM use.
RESULTS:
Seventy percent of survivors reported supplement use, with 25% using a single product. The most common VM supplements were multivitamins/minerals, vitamin D, and vitamin C, while the most common NVNM supplements included omega-3 fatty acids, probiotics, and ginseng. Survivors with higher education and greater physical activity were more likely to use VM supplements (ORs [95% CIs], 2.74 [1.76–4.25] for college graduates or above vs. middle school or below; 1.38 [1.02–1.88] for the most active group vs. the least active group). NVNM use was associated with higher education, greater physical activity levels, and a history of smoking (ORs [95% CIs], 2.29 [1.46–3.58] for college graduates or above vs. middle school or below; 1.52 [1.13–2.06] for the most active group vs. the least active group; 2.00 [1.23–3.25] for ever smokers vs. never smokers). Survivors who had undergone chemotherapy were also more likely to use NVNM supplements than those who had not (OR [95% CI], 1.37 [1.02–1.84]).
CONCLUSION
Seventy percent of Korean breast cancer survivors used dietary supplements in this study. VM use was associated with higher education and physical activity, while higher NVNM use was associated with higher education, greater physical activity, a history of smoking, and chemotherapy.
3.AFP-PIVKA-II score as a simplified quantifiable surrogate biomarker for hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence following living donor liver transplantation
Dae Hyeon WON ; Shin HWANG ; Chul-Soo AHN ; Deok-Bog MOON ; Tae-Yong HA ; Gi-Won SONG ; Dong-Hwan JUNG ; Gil-Chun PARK ; Woo-Hyoung KANG ; Young-In YOON ; Sung-Gyu LEE
Annals of Liver Transplantation 2026;6(1):25-32
Background:
We developed a simplified variant of the ADV score, the AFP-PIVKAII (AP) score for post-transplant hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) prognosis, which considers only AFP and PIVKA-II levels excluding morphometric tumor size information from the ADV score. This study investigated the prognostic performance of the AP score in predicting HCC recurrence and overall survival (OS) after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT).
Methods:
We analyzed 843 patients with HCC who underwent LDLT between 2006 and 2015, assessing HCC recurrence and OS in relation to AP score.
Results:
The median pretransplant AFP and PIVKA-II levels were 12.8 ng/mL and 27 mAU/mL, respectively. The median and mean AP scores were 2.6 log (range: 0.6–9.2 log) and 2.9±1.1 log, respectively. The 5-year time-dependent area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the AP score in predicting post-transplant HCC recurrence was 0.672 (p<0.001). HCC recurrence and OS curves along AP score intervals of 1.0 log showed statistical differences in accordance with the AP scores (both p<0.001). Using a Youden index J-derived AP score cutoff of 4.0 log, two-tiered groups (ADV <4.0 log vs. ADV ≥4.0 log) showed statistically significant differences in HCC recurrence and OS (both p<0.001). Harrell’s c-indices for AP score with cutoff of 4.0 log and ADV scores with cutoff of 5.0 log regarding HCC recurrence and OS were similar.
Conclusion
The AP score functions as an integrated surrogate marker for predicting post-transplant outcomes in patients with HCC undergoing LDLT. It may serve as a simplified alternative to the ADV score, particularly in patients with small HCCs.
4.Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniaein Korea (2015-2025): serovar distribution, toxin gene profiles, antimicrobial resistance, and identification of an apxIICA-deficient serovar 15 profile
Da-Yun BAE ; Eun Ju KANG ; Yun-Chae CHO ; Yujoon LIM ; Sung-Hyun MOON ; Won-Il KIM ; Yeonsu OH ; Ho-Seong CHO
Journal of Veterinary Science 2026;27(3):e39-
Objective:
To provide a decade-long molecular and phenotypic characterization of APP isolates from Korean pig farms, focusing on the serovar distribution, apx-based toxingene profiles, and antimicrobial susceptibility.
Methods:
Between 2015 and 2025, 1,215 pneumonic lung samples from 965 pig farms yielded 132 APP isolates. The species identity was confirmed by 16S rRNA sequencing. The serovars were determined using capsule polysaccharide (CPS) gene-based multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Toxin genes (apxIA–apxIVA) were profiled, and the antimicrobial susceptibility to 29 agents was assessed by broth microdilution according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute guidelines.
Results:
Serovar 1 was predominant (66.7%), followed by serovars 5 (17.4%) and 2 (6.8%).CPS multiplex PCR identified three isolates (2.3%) as serovar 15, which displayed heterogeneous toxin gene profiles, including apxIICA-deficient profiles. Most isolates exhibited classical repeats-in-toxin operon arrangements, suggesting ongoing diversification of toxin gene profiles. High resistance rates were observed for oxytetracycline (90.9%) and florfenicol (50.8%), and recurrent multidrug-resistant combinations were frequently detected.
Conclusions
and Relevance: Serovar 1 is dominant in Korea, but the emergence of atypical toxin gene profiles in serovar 15 may carry immunological implications. Persistent resistance to older drug classes underscores the necessity for long-term molecular surveillance, evaluation of vaccine coverage against evolving strains, and enhanced antimicrobial stewardship to strengthen the control efforts for porcine pleuropneumonia in Korea.
5.A Protocol of Korean JOint RegistrY for ALZheimer’s Treatment and Diagnostics (JOY-ALZ)
Geon Ha KIM ; Jung-Min PYUN ; Danbee KANG ; Sung Hoon KANG ; Seong-Ho KOH ; Jae Seung KIM ; So Young MOON ; Won-Jin MOON ; Young Ho PARK ; YongSoo SHIM ; Dong Won YANG ; Young Chul YOUN ; Young Hee JUNG ; Hanna CHO ; Hojin CHOI ; Jae-Sung LIM ; Kee Hyung PARK ; Seong Hye CHOI
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2026;25(1):25-41
Background:
and Purpose: To assess the long-term effectiveness, safety, and economic viability of recently approved Alzheimer’s disease (AD) therapies, as well as to evaluate the real-world application of novel diagnostics among AD patients with diverse comorbidities, comprehensive real-world data (RWD) analysis is essential. The Korean JOint RegistrY for ALZheimer’s Treatment and Diagnostics (JOY-ALZ) endeavors to create a registry of RWD derived from clinical practice on new diagnostic methods and therapeutic agents for AD introduced in Korea since 2021.
Methods:
Participants must fulfill all the following: 1) be at least 19 years old; 2) be actively receiving, scheduled to initiate, or undergoing evaluation for any AD disease-modifying treatment; 3) have completed amyloid positron emission tomography or cerebrospinal fluid AD immunoassay (a positive result is not essential for participation); 4) have a clinical classification of cognitively unimpaired, mild cognitive impairment, or probable AD dementia. Data generated during routine care is segmented into a minimum dataset, extended dataset, and research-only dataset requiring extra consent. Assessments encompass clinical, cognitive, functional, neurobehavioral, neuroimaging, and biomarker evaluations, in addition to systematic monitoring of new AD treatments and their safety.Data are collected and monitored at baseline, at semiannual intervals during the initial 2 years, and then annually up to 2034. To date, 46 medical centers will participate in JOY-ALZ.
Conclusions
JOY-ALZ is expected to promote understanding of the long-term clinical outcomes, safety, and cost-effectiveness of recently introduced diagnostics and treatments for AD, thereby supporting the progress of precision medicine in AD care and diagnosis.
6.Optimal use and cycling strategies of Janus kinase inhibitors in ulcerative colitis: current evidence and clinical implications from the KASID Guidelines Task Force Team
Seung Min HONG ; Dong Hyun KIM ; June Hwa BAE ; Seung Yong SHIN ; Eun Mi SONG ; Ji Eun KIM ; Young Joo YANG ; Jiyoung YOON ; Sang-Bum KANG ; Eun Soo KIM ; Seong-Eun KIM ; Seong-Jung KIM ; Jun LEE ; Soo-Young NA ; Soo Jung PARK ; Sang Hyoung PARK ; Miyoung CHOI ; Myung Ha KIM ; Won MOON ; Sung-Ae JUNG ;
Intestinal Research 2026;24(1):27-37
Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are an important treatment option for ulcerative colitis, providing rapid onset of action, oral administration, and efficacy even after biologic failure. The 3 approved agents—tofacitinib, filgotinib, and upadacitinib—differ in JAK isoform selectivity, leading to clinically meaningful differences in efficacy and safety. Evidence from network meta-analyses, clinical trials, and real-world studies consistently shows that upadacitinib provides the highest efficacy for induction and maintenance of remission, whereas filgotinib demonstrates the most favorable safety profile. The strong efficacy of upadacitinib and tofacitinib is particularly relevant in patients with severe disease, including acute severe ulcerative colitis, and upadacitinib maintains high efficacy regardless of prior advanced therapy exposure. JAK inhibitors also benefit extraintestinal manifestations. Although risks such as herpes zoster, serious infection, thromboembolism, and major cardiovascular events differ among agents, long-term data suggest generally acceptable safety when used appropriately. Intraclass JAK-to-JAK cycling is feasible, with about half of patients achieving steroid-free clinical remission in retrospective cohorts. Based on mechanistic, clinical, and real-world evidence, filgotinib may be a first-line option for patients with lower disease activity or when safety is a priority, whereas upadacitinib or tofacitinib may be preferred in higher disease activity. Strategically selecting agents may improve durability and outcomes.
7.Donor-to-recipient sex match status has no prognostic effect on long-term survival following liver transplantation:a retrospective observational study
Woo-Hyoung KANG ; I-Ji JEONG ; Shin HWANG ; Chul-Soo AHN ; Deok-Bog MOON ; Tae-Yong HA ; Gi-Won SONG ; Dong-Hwan JUNG ; Gil-Chun PARK ; Young-In YOON ; Sung-Gyu LEE
Clinical Transplantation and Research 2026;40(1):76-86
Background:
Studies on whether donor-to-recipient sex match status affects long-term survival after liver transplantation (LT) have yielded contradictory results. This study evaluated whether donor-to-recipient sex match status influenced long-term survival after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) or deceased donor liver transplantation (DDLT) at a high-volume center.
Methods:
The study included 6,664 patients who underwent primary LT between January 2000 and December 2022 at our institution. Patients were divided into four groups according to donor-to-recipient sex match status: male-to-male (n=3,427 [51.4%]), male-to-female (n=1,152 [17.3%]), female-to-male (n=1,385 [20.8%]), and female-to-female (n=700 [10.5%]).
Results:
Regarding clinical characteristics, the four groups differed significantly regarding background liver disease (P<0.001), model for end-stage liver disease score (P<0.001), serum protein induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist II level (P=0.003), presence of concurrent hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC; P<0.001), and type of LT (P=0.003). Overall survival (OS) of all LT recipients did not differ significantly among the groups (P=0.377). Donor-to-recipient sex match status did not affect long-term OS in either LDLT (P=0.176) or DDLT (P=0.220) groups. In addition, sex match status did not significantly influence posttransplant OS among patients who underwent LDLT without HCC (P=0.464), LDLT with HCC (P=0.236), DDLT without HCC (P=0.338), or DDLT with HCC (P=0.818).
Conclusions
Donor-to-recipient sex match status does not significantly affect posttransplant patient survival or HCC prognosis after LDLT or DDLT.
8.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Part II. Follow-up Surveillance after Initial Treatment 2026
Eun Kyung LEE ; Seung Heon KANG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Mijin KIM ; Min Joo KIM ; Bo Hyun KIM ; Ji Won KIM ; Dong Gyu NA ; Sohyun PARK ; Ji-In BANG ; Kyorim BACK ; Youngduk SEO ; Young-Ik SON ; Young Shin SONG ; Dong Yeob SHIN ; Jong-Hyuk AHN ; Hwa Young AHN ; So Won OH ; Ho-Ryun WON ; Won Sang YOO ; Min Kyoung LEE ; Sang-Woo LEE ; Jeongmin LEE ; Ji Ye LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Ki-Wook CHUNG ; Ari CHONG ; Jin Hyang JUNG ; Sun Wook CHO ; Yoon Young CHO ; Chae Moon HONG ; Young Joo PARK ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2026;19(1):1-40
In patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC), initial recurrence risk stratification based on clinical, histopathological, and perioperative data remains the key determinant for guiding management strategies during the first 1-2 years post-treatment. However, the adoption of ongoing risk stratification (ORS), which dynamically reassesses risk by integrating longitudinal clinical data and treatment response, enables more precise long-term prognostic assessment and facilitates highly individualized management. Building upon recent guidelines, the 2026 KTA guideline has been further refined by incorporating robust evidence from large-scale national cohorts and comprehensive systematic reviews. These updated recommendations outline contemporary concepts of ORS, risk-adapted TSH suppression targets, optimized surveillance modalities for recurrence detection, and disease-specific long-term follow-up strategies. Reflecting the paradigm shift toward de-escalated treatment, this revision integrates evolved perspectives on TSH suppression intensity, the clinical interpretation of thyroglobulin levels, and tailored follow-up intervals. These evidence-based recommendations aim to minimize unnecessary treatment and excessive surveillance in the large proportion of patients with excellent prognosis after initial therapy, while ensuring that each patient receives appropriately tailored and effective long-term management.
9.Treatment of Helicobacter pylori Infection in Korea: An Evidence-Based Analysis of the Upcoming 2025 Guideline
Chang Seok BANG ; Seung Joo KANG ; Su Youn NAM ; Sung Eun KIM ; Seung Young KIM ; Hyunchul LIM ; Chung Hyun TAE ; Moon Won LEE ; Seung Han KIM ; Hye-Kyung JUNG ; Byung-Wook KIM
The Korean Journal of Helicobacter and Upper Gastrointestinal Research 2026;26(1):23-36
The efficacy of clarithromycin-containing triple therapy (TT) against Helicobacter pylori has declined in Korea, with recent first-line eradication rates falling below 70%. Clarithromycin resistance exceeded 30%, undermining the standard regimen for H. pylori. These trends necessitate a change in the treatment strategy. This review analyzed the shift proposed in the draft of the 2025 Korean H. pylori guidelines. We examined the rationale for abandoning TT as a first-line empirical therapy and the establishment of a new dual-pillar strategy: 1) the declining role of clarithromycin-containing TT as a first-line treatment and 2) polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based tailored therapy as the recommended precision approach. We explored the 1) emergence of new empirical regimen options, 2) application of tailored therapy, and 3) adoption of potassium-competitive acid blockers (P-CABs). Empirical regimens have shifted toward four-drug combinations to achieve higher cure rates. Concomitant therapy (proton-pump inhibitor [PPI] or P-CAB+amoxicillin+clarithromycin+metronidazole) offers high efficacy but raises concerns about antibiotic overuse. As a compromise, bismuth-augmented triple regimens (adding bismuth to TT) are now recommended; these modified quadruple therapies (e.g., PACB: PPI+amoxicillin+clarithromycin+bismuth, or PAMB: PPI+amoxicillin+metronidazole+bismuth) significantly improve eradication rates without requiring a third antibiotic class. Regarding tailored therapy, PCR-based domestic clinical research data consistently achieves ≥90% cure rates in first-line treatment—markedly higher than empirical TT in Korea. Economic analyses supported the cost-effectiveness of this approach. The guideline algorithm for salvage therapy was clarified. Bismuth quadruple therapy has been confirmed as the standard second-line treatment. For third-line therapy, we analyzed the efficacy of levofloxacin-based regimens, rifabutin-based therapy, and bismuth add-on therapy with two previously unused antibiotics. The 2025 Korean guidelines establish quadruple therapies as the new standard through a dual strategy: pragmatic empirical treatment and PCR-guided tailored therapy, with P-CABs and bismuth-based regimens as key components.

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