1.Research progress on the mechanisms of Tau phosphorylation and its kinases in hypoxic-ischemic brain damage.
Qi-Yi HUANG ; You XIANG ; Jia-Hang TANG ; Li-Jia CHEN ; Kun-Lin LI ; Wei-Fang ZHAO ; Qian WANG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2025;77(1):139-150
Hypoxic-ischemic brain damage (HIBD) is one of the main causes of disability in middle-aged and elderly people, as well as high mortality rates and long-term physical impairments in newborns. The pathological manifestations of HIBD include neuronal damage and loss of myelin sheaths. Tau protein is an important microtubule-associated protein in brain, exists in neurons and oligodendrocytes, and regulates various cellular activities such as cell differentiation and maturation, axonal transport, and maintenance of cellular cytoskeleton structure. Phosphorylation is a common chemical modification of Tau. In physiological condition, it maintains normal cell cytoskeleton and biological functions by regulating Tau structure and function. In pathological conditions, it leads to abnormal Tau phosphorylation and influences its structure and functions, resulting in Tauopathies. Studies have shown that brain hypoxia-ischemia could cause abnormal alteration in Tau phosphorylation, then participating in the pathological process of HIBD. Meanwhile, brain hypoxia-ischemia can induce oxidative stress and inflammation, and multiple Tau protein kinases are activated and involved in Tau abnormal phosphorylation. Therefore, exploring specific molecular mechanisms by which HIBD activates Tau protein kinases, and elucidating their relationship with abnormal Tau phosphorylation are crucial for future researches on HIBD related treatments. This review aims to focus on the mechanisms of the role of Tau phosphorylation in HIBD, and the potential relationships between Tau protein kinases and Tau phosphorylation, providing a basis for intervention and treatment of HIBD.
Humans
;
tau Proteins/physiology*
;
Phosphorylation
;
Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain/physiopathology*
;
Animals
;
Oxidative Stress
2.Thalidomide mitigates Crohn's disease colitis by modulating gut microbiota, metabolites, and regulatory T cell immunity.
Chao-Tao TANG ; Yonghui WU ; Qing TAO ; Chun-Yan ZENG ; You-Xiang CHEN
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(4):101121-101121
Thalidomide (THA) is renowned for its potent anti-inflammatory properties. This study aimed to elucidate its underlying mechanisms in the context of Crohn's disease (CD) development. Mouse colitis models were established by dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) treatment. Fecal microbiota and metabolites were analyzed by metagenomic sequencing and mass spectrometry, respectively. Antibiotic-treated mice served as models for microbiota depletion and transplantation. The expression of forkhead box P3+ (FOXP3+) regulatory T cells (Tregs) was measured by flow cytometry and immunohistochemical assay in colitis model and patient cohort. THA inhibited colitis in DSS-treated mice by altering the gut microbiota profile, with an increased abundance of probiotics Bacteroides fragilis, while pathogenic bacteria were depleted. In addition, THA increased beneficial metabolites bile acids and significantly restored gut barrier function. Transcriptomic profiling revealed that THA inhibited interleukin-17 (IL-17), IL-1β and cell cycle signaling. Fecal microbiota transplantation from THA-treated mice to microbiota-depleted mice partly recapitulated the effects of THA. Specifically, increased level of gut commensal B. fragilis was observed, correlated with elevated levels of the microbial metabolite 3alpha-hydroxy-7-oxo-5beta-cholanic acid (7-ketolithocholic acid, 7-KA) following THA treatment. This microbial metabolite may stable FOXP3 expression by targeting the receptor FMR1 autosomal homolog 1 (FXR1) to inhibit autophagy. An interaction between FOXP3 and FXR1 was identified, with binding regions localized to the FOXP3 domain (aa238-335) and the FXR1 domain (aa82-222), respectively. Conclusively, THA modulates the gut microbiota and metabolite profiles towards a more beneficial composition, enhances gut barrier function, promotes the differentiation of FOXP3+ Tregs and curbs pro-inflammatory pathways.
3.Clinical trial of brexpiprazole in the treatment of adults with acute schizophrenia
Shu-Zhe ZHOU ; Liang LI ; Dong YANG ; Jin-Guo ZHAI ; Tao JIANG ; Yu-Zhong SHI ; Bin WU ; Xiang-Ping WU ; Ke-Qing LI ; Tie-Bang LIU ; Jie LI ; Shi-You TANG ; Li-Li WANG ; Xue-Yi WANG ; Yun-Long TAN ; Qi LIU ; Uki MOTOMICHI ; Ming-Ji XIAN ; Hong-Yan ZHANG
The Chinese Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 2024;40(5):654-658
Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of brexpiprazole in treating acute schizophrenia.Methods Patients with schizophrenia were randomly divided into treatment group and control group.The treatment group was given brexpiprozole 2-4 mg·d-1 orally and the control group was given aripiprazole 10-20 mg·d-1orally,both were treated for 6 weeks.Clinical efficacy of the two groups,the response rate at endpoint,the changes from baseline to endpoint of Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale(PANSS),Clinical Global Impression-Improvement(CGI-S),Personal and Social Performance scale(PSP),PANSS Positive syndrome subscale,PANSS negative syndrome subscale were compared.The incidence of treatment-related adverse events in two groups were compared.Results There were 184 patients in treatment group and 186 patients in control group.After treatment,the response rates of treatment group and control group were 79.50%(140 cases/184 cases)and 82.40%(150 cases/186 cases),the scores of CGI-I of treatment group and control group were(2.00±1.20)and(1.90±1.01),with no significant difference(all P>0.05).From baseline to Week 6,the mean change of PANSS total score wese(-30.70±16.96)points in treatment group and(-32.20±17.00)points in control group,with no significant difference(P>0.05).The changes of CGI-S scores in treatment group and control group were(-2.00±1.27)and(-1.90±1.22)points,PSP scores were(18.80±14.77)and(19.20±14.55)points,PANSS positive syndrome scores were(-10.30±5.93)and(-10.80±5.81)points,PANSS negative syndrome scores were(-6.80±5.98)and(-7.30±5.15)points,with no significant difference(P>0.05).There was no significant difference in the incidence of treatment-related adverse events between the two group(69.00%vs.64.50%,P>0.05).Conclusion The non-inferiority of Brexpiprazole to aripiprazole was established,with comparable efficacy and acceptability.
4.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*
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Humans
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Consensus
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Computer Security/standards*
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Confidentiality/ethics*
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Informed Consent/ethics*
5.Chinese Guideline on the Management of Polypoidal Choroidal Vasculopathy (2022).
You-Xin CHEN ; Yu-Qing ZHANG ; Chang-Zheng CHEN ; Hong DAI ; Su-Yan LI ; Xiang MA ; Xiao-Dong SUN ; Shi-Bo TANG ; Yu-Sheng WANG ; Wen-Bin WEI ; Feng WEN ; Ge-Zhi XU ; Wei-Hong YU ; Mei-Xia ZHANG ; Ming-Wei ZHAO ; Yang ZHANG ; Fang QI ; Xun XU ; Xiao-Xin LI
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2023;38(2):77-93
Background In mainland China, patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) have approximately an 40% prevalence of polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV). This disease leads to recurrent retinal pigment epithelium detachment (PED), extensive subretinal or vitreous hemorrhages, and severe vision loss. China has introduced various treatment modalities in the past years and gained comprehensive experience in treating PCV.Methods A total of 14 retinal specialists nationwide with expertise in PCV were empaneled to prioritize six questions and address their corresponding outcomes, regarding opinions on inactive PCV, choices of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) monotherapy, photodynamic therapy (PDT) monotherapy or combined therapy, patients with persistent subretinal fluid (SRF) or intraretinal fluid (IRF) after loading dose anti-VEGF, and patients with massive subretinal hemorrhage. An evidence synthesis team conducted systematic reviews, which informed the recommendations that address these questions. This guideline used the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) approach to assess the certainty of evidence and grade the strengths of recommendations. Results The panel proposed the following six conditional recommendations regarding treatment choices. (1) For patients with inactive PCV, we suggest observation over treatment. (2) For treatment-na?ve PCV patients, we suggest either anti-VEGF monotherapy or combined anti-VEGF and PDT rather than PDT monotherapy. (3) For patients with PCV who plan to initiate combined anti-VEGF and PDT treatment, we suggest later/rescue PDT over initiate PDT. (4) For PCV patients who plan to initiate anti-VEGF monotherapy, we suggest the treat and extend (T&E) regimen rather than the pro re nata (PRN) regimen following three monthly loading doses. (5) For patients with persistent SRF or IRF on optical coherence tomography (OCT) after three monthly anti-VEGF treatments, we suggest proceeding with anti-VEGF treatment rather than observation. (6) For PCV patients with massive subretinal hemorrhage (equal to or more than four optic disc areas) involving the central macula, we suggest surgery (vitrectomy in combination with tissue-plasminogen activator (tPA) intraocular injection and gas tamponade) rather than anti-VEGF monotherapy. Conclusions Six evidence-based recommendations support optimal care for PCV patients' management.
6.Safety and efficacy of the early administration of levosimendan in patients with acute non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and elevated NT-proBNP levels: An Early Management Strategy of Acute Heart Failure (EMS-AHF).
Feng XU ; Yuan BIAN ; Guo Qiang ZHANG ; Lu Yao GAO ; Yu Fa LIU ; Tong Xiang LIU ; Gang LI ; Rui Xue SONG ; Li Jun SU ; Yan Ju ZHOU ; Jia Yu CUI ; Xian Liang YAN ; Fang Ming GUO ; Huan Yi ZHANG ; Qing Hui LI ; Min ZHAO ; Li Kun MA ; Bei An YOU ; Ge WANG ; Li KONG ; Jian Liang MA ; Xin Fu ZHOU ; Ze Long CHANG ; Zhen Yu TANG ; Dan Yu YU ; Kai CHENG ; Li XUE ; Xiao LI ; Jiao Jiao PANG ; Jia Li WANG ; Hai Tao ZHANG ; Xue Zhong YU ; Yu Guo CHEN
Chinese Journal of Internal Medicine 2023;62(4):374-383
Objectives: To investigated the safety and efficacy of treating patients with acute non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) and elevated levels of N-terminal pro-hormone B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) with levosimendan within 24 hours of first medical contact (FMC). Methods: This multicenter, open-label, block-randomized controlled trial (NCT03189901) investigated the safety and efficacy of levosimendan as an early management strategy of acute heart failure (EMS-AHF) for patients with NSTEMI and high NT-proBNP levels. This study included 255 patients with NSTEMI and elevated NT-proBNP levels, including 142 males and 113 females with a median age of 65 (58-70) years, and were admitted in the emergency or outpatient departments at 14 medical centers in China between October 2017 and October 2021. The patients were randomly divided into a levosimendan group (n=129) and a control group (n=126). The primary outcome measure was NT-proBNP levels on day 3 of treatment and changes in the NT-proBNP levels from baseline on day 5 after randomization. The secondary outcome measures included the proportion of patients with more than 30% reduction in NT-proBNP levels from baseline, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) during hospitalization and at 6 months after hospitalization, safety during the treatment, and health economics indices. The measurement data parameters between groups were compared using the t-test or the non-parametric test. The count data parameters were compared between groups using the χ² test. Results: On day 3, the NT-proBNP levels in the levosimendan group were lower than the control group but were statistically insignificant [866 (455, 1 960) vs. 1 118 (459, 2 417) ng/L, Z=-1.25,P=0.21]. However, on day 5, changes in the NT-proBNP levels from baseline in the levosimendan group were significantly higher than the control group [67.6% (33.8%,82.5%)vs.54.8% (7.3%,77.9%), Z=-2.14, P=0.03]. There were no significant differences in the proportion of patients with more than 30% reduction in the NT-proBNP levels on day 5 between the levosimendan and the control groups [77.5% (100/129) vs. 69.0% (87/126), χ²=2.34, P=0.13]. Furthermore, incidences of MACE did not show any significant differences between the two groups during hospitalization [4.7% (6/129) vs. 7.1% (9/126), χ²=0.72, P=0.40] and at 6 months [14.7% (19/129) vs. 12.7% (16/126), χ²=0.22, P=0.64]. Four cardiac deaths were reported in the control group during hospitalization [0 (0/129) vs. 3.2% (4/126), P=0.06]. However, 6-month survival rates were comparable between the two groups (log-rank test, P=0.18). Moreover, adverse events or serious adverse events such as shock, ventricular fibrillation, and ventricular tachycardia were not reported in both the groups during levosimendan treatment (days 0-1). The total cost of hospitalization [34 591.00(15 527.46,59 324.80) vs. 37 144.65(16 066.90,63 919.00)yuan, Z=-0.26, P=0.80] and the total length of hospitalization [9 (8, 12) vs. 10 (7, 13) days, Z=0.72, P=0.72] were lower for patients in the levosimendan group compared to those in the control group, but did not show statistically significant differences. Conclusions: Early administration of levosimendan reduced NT-proBNP levels in NSTEMI patients with elevated NT-proBNP and did not increase the total cost and length of hospitalization, but did not significantly improve MACE during hospitalization or at 6 months.
Male
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Female
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Humans
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Aged
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Natriuretic Peptide, Brain
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Simendan/therapeutic use*
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Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction
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Heart Failure/drug therapy*
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Peptide Fragments
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Arrhythmias, Cardiac
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Biomarkers
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Prognosis
7.Reduning Injection protects flu-infected mice by inhibiting infiltration of inflammatory cells in lung and down-regulating cytokine storm.
Xiao-Lan YE ; Chen-Chen TANG ; Hui LIU ; You HU ; Tian-Nan XIANG ; Yue-Juan ZHENG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(17):4698-4706
This study aimed to explore the protective effect of Reduning Injection(RDN) on mice infected by influenza virus A/PR/8(PR8) and its immune regulatory roles during viral infection. In in vivo experiments, female C57 BL/6 mice were randomly divided into phosphate buffered saline(PBS) group, PR8-infected group, oseltamivir treatment group(OSV) and RDN treatment group. After 2 h of PR8 infection, mice in the oseltamivir group were gavaged with oseltamivir 30 mg·kg~(-1), and those in the RDN treatment group were injected intraperitoneally with RDN 1.5 mL·kg~(-1)once per day for seven consecutive days. The body weight of mice in each group was recorded at the same time every morning for 16 consecutive days. The line chart of body weight change was created to analyze the protective effect of RDN on flu-infected mice. The relative mRNA expression of different cytokines(IL-6, TNF-α, MCP-1, IL-1β, MIP-2, IP-10 and IL-10) in lung samples of flu-infected mice was detected by PCR. Flow cytometry was utilized to analyze the composition of immune cells of mouse BALF samples on day 5 after infection. Mouse macrophage cell line RAW264.7 was planted and treated by different concentrations of RDN(150, 300, 600 μg·mL~(-1)) for 24 h or 48 h, and cell proliferation was detected by CCK-8 assay. RAW264.7 cells and mouse primary peritoneal macrophages were stimulated with synthetic single stranded RNA(R837), which elicited the inflammatory response by mimicking the infection of single-stranded RNA viruses. The expression of cytokines and chemokines in the supernatants of above culture system was detected by ELISA and qPCR. On days 4, 5, 6, 7 and 15 after infection, the body weight loss of mice in the RDN treatment group was alleviated compared with that of PR8-infected mice(P<0.05). RDN treatment obviously reduced lung index and the production of IL-6, TNF-α, MCP-1 and MIP-2 in lung tissues of flu-infected mice(P<0.05). The proportions of macrophages, neutrophils and T cells in mouse BALF samples were analyzed by flow cytometry, and compared with PR8-infected mice, RDN decreased the proportion of macrophages in BALF of flu-infected mice(P<0.05), and the proportion of T cells was recovered dramatically(P<0.001). In CCK-8 assay, the concentrations of RDN(150, 300, 600 μg·mL~(-1)) failed to cause cytotoxicity to RAW264.7 cells. In addition, RDN lowered the expression of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, TNF-α,MCP-1, IL-1β, RANTES, and IP-10 and even anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in R837-induced macrophages. RDN reduced the infiltration of inflammatory macrophages and the production of excessive inflammatory cytokines, alleviated the body weight loss of flu-infected mice. What's more, RDN restored the depletion of T cells, which might prevent secondary infection and deteriorative progression of the disease. Taken together, RDN may inhibit cytokine production and therefore down-regulate cytokine storm during the infection of influenza virus.
Animals
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Anti-Inflammatory Agents/pharmacology*
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Body Weight
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Chemokine CCL5/pharmacology*
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Chemokine CXCL10/pharmacology*
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Cytokine Release Syndrome
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Cytokines/genetics*
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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Female
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Imiquimod/pharmacology*
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Interleukin-10
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Interleukin-6
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Lung
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Mice
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Oseltamivir/pharmacology*
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Phosphates/pharmacology*
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RNA
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RNA, Messenger
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Sincalide/pharmacology*
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Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/genetics*
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Weight Loss
8. Corrigendum to “Neuroprotective effect of Sanqi Tongshuan Tablets on sequelae post-stroke in rats” Chinese Herbal Medicines 11 (2019) 45–51 (Chinese Herbal Medicines (2019) 11(1) (45–51), (S167463841830162X), (10.1016/j.chmed.2018.12.002))
Wei-ting WANG ; Chun-hua HAO ; Shuang-yong SUN ; Rui ZHANG ; Zhuan-you ZHAO ; Li-da TANG ; Shao-xiang ZHANG ; Xiang-hua ZHANG ; Feng GUO
Chinese Herbal Medicines 2021;13(2):286-286
When this paper was first published the following ethical statement was omitted in error: This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of AAALAC (NO. 001488) and carried out in strict accordance with the recommendations in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals of Tianjin Institute of Pharmaceutical Research. The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused. DOI of original article: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chmed.2018.12.002
9.Clinical effect of multicenter multidisciplinary treatment in children with renal malignant tumors.
Ze-Xi YIN ; Xiang-Ling HE ; Jun HE ; Xin TIAN ; Cheng-Guang ZHU ; Ke-Ke CHEN ; Run-Ying ZOU ; Ya-Lan YOU ; Xin-Ping JIANG ; Wen-Fang TANG ; Min-Hui ZENG ; Zhi-Jun HUANG ; An-Qi YAO
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2021;23(2):169-173
OBJECTIVE:
To study the long-term clinical effect of multicenter multidisciplinary treatment (MDT) in children with renal malignant tumors.
METHODS:
A retrospective analysis was performed on the medical data of 55 children with renal malignant tumors who were diagnosed and treated with MDT in 3 hospitals in Hunan Province from January 2015 to January 2020, with GD-WT-2010 and CCCG-WT-2016 for treatment regimens. A Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to analyze the survival of the children.
RESULTS:
Of the 55 children, 10 had stage I tumor, 14 had stage Ⅱ tumor, 22 had stage Ⅲ tumor, 7 had stage IV tumor, and 2 had stage V tumor. As for pathological type, 47 had FH type and 8 had UFH type. All children underwent complete tumor resection. Of the 55 children, 14 (25%) received preoperative chemotherapy. All children, except 1 child with renal cell carcinoma, received postoperative chemotherapy. Among the 31 children with indication for radiotherapy, 21 (68%) received postoperative radiotherapy. One child died of postoperative metastasis. The incidence rate of FH-type myelosuppression was 94.4%, and the incidence rate of UFH-type myelosuppression was 100%. The median follow-up time was 21 months and the median survival time was 26 months for all children, with an overall survival rate of 98% and an event-free survival rate of 95%.
CONCLUSIONS
Multicenter MDT has the advantages of high success rate of operation and good therapeutic effect of chemotherapy in the treatment of children with renal malignant tumors, with myelosuppression as the most common side effects, and radiotherapy is safe and effective with few adverse events. Therefore, MDT has good feasibility, safety, and economy.
Child
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Family
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Humans
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Kidney Neoplasms/therapy*
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Progression-Free Survival
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Retrospective Studies
10.Serum metabolic profiling of traditional Chinese medicine syndromes in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome.
Si-Qi TANG ; Yun-Liang WANG ; Zi-Ye XIE ; Yang ZHANG ; Yi GUO ; Kang-Li GAO ; Tang-You MAO ; Chun-E XIE ; Jun-Xiang LI ; Xiao-Yan GAO
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2021;19(3):274-281
OBJECTIVE:
The clinical symptoms of diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) can be effectively improved by traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) treatment, based on the usage of specific therapies for different TCM syndromes. However, in the stage of diagnosis, the standard criteria for the classification of TCM syndrome were still deficient. Through serum metabolic profiling, this study aimed to explore potential biomarkers in IBS-D patients with different TCM syndromes, which can assist in diagnosis of the disease.
METHODS:
Serum samples were collected from healthy controls (30 cases), IBS-D patients with Liver-Stagnation and Spleen-Deficiency syndrome (LSSD, 30 cases), Yang Deficiency of Spleen and Kidney syndrome (YDSK, 11 cases) and Damp Abundance due to Spleen-Deficiency syndrome (DASD, 22 cases). Serum metabolic profiling was conducted by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The potential biomarkers were screened by orthogonal partial least square-discriminate analysis, while metabolic pathways undergoing alterations were identified by pathway enrichment analysis in MetaboAnalyst 4.0.
RESULTS:
Overall, 34 potential biomarkers were identified in LSSD group, 36 in YDSK group and 31 in DASD group. And the 13 metabolites shared by three groups were determined as the potential biomarkers of IBS-D. Glycerophospholipid metabolism was disturbed significantly in IBS-D patients, which may play a role in IBS-D through inflammation. What's more, three TCM syndromes have the specific potential biomarkers in glycerophospholipid metabolism.
CONCLUSION
The serum metabolomics revealed that different TCM syndrome types in IBS-D may have different metabolic patterns during disease progression and glycerophospholipid metabolism was one of the pathways, whose metabolism was disturbed differently among three TCM syndromes in IBS-D. Therefore, the specific potential biomarkers in glycerophospholipid metabolism of three TCM syndromes in IBS-D can serve as the objective indicators, which can facilitate the TCM-syndrome objective classification of IBS-D.

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