1.Clinical practice guidelines for perioperative multimodality treatment of non-small cell lung cancer.
Wenjie JIAO ; Liang ZHAO ; Jiandong MEI ; Jia ZHONG ; Yongfeng YU ; Nan BI ; Lan ZHANG ; Lvhua WANG ; Xiaolong FU ; Jie WANG ; Shun LU ; Lunxu LIU ; Shugeng GAO
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(21):2702-2721
BACKGROUND:
Lung cancer is currently the most prevalent malignancy and the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Although the early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) presents a relatively good prognosis, a considerable number of lung cancer cases are still detected and diagnosed at locally advanced or late stages. Surgical treatment combined with perioperative multimodality treatment is the mainstay of treatment for locally advanced NSCLC and has been shown to improve patient survival. Following the standard methods of neoadjuvant therapy, perioperative management, postoperative adjuvant therapy, and other therapeutic strategies are important for improving patients' prognosis and quality of life. However, controversies remain over the perioperative management of NSCLC and presently consensus and standardized guidelines are lacking for addressing critical clinical issues in multimodality treatment.
METHODS:
The working group consisted of 125 multidisciplinary experts from thoracic surgery, medical oncology, radiotherapy, epidemiology, and psychology. This guideline was developed using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system. The clinical questions were collected and selected based on preliminary open-ended questionnaires and subsequent discussions during the Guideline Working Group meetings. PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Scopus, and China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) were searched for available evidence. The GRADE system was used to evaluate the quality of evidence and grade the strengths of recommendations. Finally, the recommendations were developed through a structured consensus-building process.
RESULTS:
The Guideline Development Group initially collected a total of 62 important clinical questions. After a series of consensus-building conferences, 24 clinical questions were identified and corresponding recommendations were ultimately developed, focusing on neoadjuvant therapy, perioperative management, adjuvant therapy, postoperative psychological rehabilitation, prognosis assement, and follow-up protocols for NSCLC.
CONCLUSIONS
This guideline puts forward reasonable recommendations focusing on neoadjuvant therapy, perioperative management, adjuvant therapy, postoperative psychological rehabilitation, prognosis assessment, and follow-up protocol of NSCLC. It standardizes perioperative multimodality treatment and provides guidance for clinical practice among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and radiotherapists, aiming to reduce postoperative recurrence, improve patient survival, accelerate recovery, and minimize postoperative complications such as atelectasis.
Humans
;
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/therapy*
;
Lung Neoplasms/therapy*
;
Combined Modality Therapy
;
Perioperative Care
2.FTO-regulated m6A modification of pri-miR-139 represses papillary thyroid carcinoma metastasis.
Jiale LI ; Ping ZHOU ; Juan DU ; Hongwei SHEN ; Yongfeng ZHAO ; Shanshan YU
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2025;50(5):815-826
OBJECTIVES:
Increasing detection of low-risk papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is associated with overdiagnosis and overtreatment. N6-methyladenosine (m6A)-mediated microRNA (miRNA) dysregulation plays a critical role in tumor metastasis and progression. However, the functional role of m6A-miRNAs in PTC remains unclear. This study aims to elucidate the regulatory mechanism of m6A-miR-139-5p expression in PTC, determine its association with PTC metastasis, and evaluate its potential as a diagnostic biomarker for PTC metastasis, thereby providing experimental evidence for precision diagnosis and therapy.
METHODS:
Expression profiles of m6A-miRNAs were compared between the The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and GSE130512 cohorts to identify metastasis-associated candidates. Clinical specimens from 13 metastasis and 18 non-metastasis PTC patients were analyzed to assess m6A-miR-139-5p expression and its correlation with metastasis. Functional experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of fat mass and obesity-associated protein (FTO) on pri-miR-139 methylation and processing, clarifying its regulatory role in miR-139-5p expression. In TPC-1 cells, MTT assays were performed to evaluate whether miR-139-5p overexpression could counteract FTO-mediated cell proliferation. Transwell invasion assays were used to determine the impact of miR-139-5p on PTC cell invasion, exploring whether it functions through the ZEB1/E-cadherin axis.
RESULTS:
By comparing TCGA and GSE130512 cohorts, it was found that circulating m6A-miR-139-5p could serve as a biological indicator for detecting PTC metastasis. Detection of 13 metastatic and 18 non-metastatic clinical specimens showed that FTO inhibited the processing of pri-miR-139 by reducing its methylation level, leading to the dysregulation of miR-139-5p in PTC (P<0.05). In TPC-1 cells, MTT assay showed that overexpression of miR-139-5p could partially reverse FTO overexpression-mediated cell proliferation (P<0.05). In addition, miR-139-5p inhibited the invasive ability of PTC cells by targeting the ZEB1/E-cadherin axis, while FTO overexpression could partially weaken this inhibitory effect.
CONCLUSIONS
Circulating miR-139-5p can be a potential marker for evaluating PTC metastasis. FTO affects the expression and function of miR-139-5p by regulating m6A modification of pri-miR-139, but its clinical value needs further verification.
Humans
;
MicroRNAs/metabolism*
;
Thyroid Cancer, Papillary/metabolism*
;
Alpha-Ketoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase FTO/metabolism*
;
Thyroid Neoplasms/metabolism*
;
Cell Line, Tumor
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Adenosine/genetics*
;
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
;
Female
;
Male
;
Cadherins/metabolism*
;
Cell Proliferation
;
Zinc Finger E-box-Binding Homeobox 1/genetics*
3.Tranexamic acid-fatty alcohol polyoxyethylene ether conjugation/PVA foam for venous sclerotherapy via vascular damage and inhibiting plasmin system.
Jizhuang MA ; Keda ZHANG ; Wenhan LI ; Yu DING ; Yongfeng CHEN ; Xiaoyu HUANG ; Tong YU ; Di SONG ; Haoran NIU ; Huichao XIE ; Tianzhi YANG ; Xiaoyun ZHAO ; Xinggang YANG ; Pingtian DING
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(6):3291-3304
Venous system diseases mainly include varicose veins and venous malformations of lower limbs and the genital system. Most of them are chronic diseases that cause serious clinical symptoms to patients and affect their health and quality of life. Sclerotherapy has become the first-line therapy for venous system diseases. However, there are problems such as incomplete fibrosis and vascular recanalization after sclerotherapy, and improper operation will cause serious adverse consequences. Therefore, exploring a safe and effective sclerotherapy strategy is essential for developing clinically successful sclerotherapy. To solve the above problems, we proposed a new sclerotherapy strategy with a dual mechanism of "vascular damage and plasmin (PLA) system inhibition." We intended to construct a novel cationic surfactant (AEOx-TA) by reacting tranexamic acid (TA), a parent structure, with fatty alcohol polyoxyethylene ether (AEOx) by ester bonds. AEOx-TA could damage vascular endothelium and initiate a coagulation cascade effect to induce thrombus. Furthermore, AEOx-TA could be degraded by esterase and release the parent drug, TA, which could inhibit the PLA system to inhibit the degradation of thrombus and extracellular matrix and promote the process of vascular fibrosis. In addition, such surfactant-based sclerosants have foam-forming properties, and they can be blended with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) to prepare a highly stable foam formulation (AEOx-TA/P), which can achieve a precise drug delivery and prolonged drug retention time, thereby improving drug efficacy and reducing the risk of ectopic embolism. Overall, the novel cationic surfactant AEOx-TA provides a new avenue to resolve the bottleneck: surfactant sclerosants' efficiency is relatively low in the current sclerotherapy.
4.Correlation of circumference and displacement of the third fracture fragment with the healing of femoral shaft fractures treated with intramedullary nailing
Shuo YANG ; Tao FENG ; Shuchang CHEN ; Jian YU ; Yanyan ZHANG ; Yongfeng HUO ; Guangxue GU ; Zhaoyang YIN
Chinese Journal of Tissue Engineering Research 2024;28(36):5839-5845
BACKGROUND:After the treatment of femoral shaft fracture with the intramedullary nail,the third fracture open reduction indications are controversial.Some scholars believe that limited open reduction can achieve anatomical reduction,conducive to fracture healing;but some scholars believe that no open reduction of the third fracture still has a high fracture healing rate. OBJECTIVE:To investigate the effect of the circumference and displacement of the third fragment on fracture healing after intramedullary nailing of femoral shaft fractures with the third fragment. METHODS:A retrospective cohort study was conducted to analyze the clinical data of 142 patients suffered a femoral shaft fracture with a third fragment admitted to the Affiliated Lianyungang Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University from February 2016 to December 2021.The fracture were classified into three types according to the circumference of the third fracture with reference to the diaphyseal circumference at the fracture site:type 1 in 71 cases,type 2 in 52 cases,and type 3 in 19 cases.Referring to the diaphyseal diameter,the fractures were classified into three degrees according to the degree of the third fragment displacement:degree I in 95 cases,degree II in 31 cases,and degree III in 16 cases.All patients were treated with femoral interlocking intramedullary nails,and no intervention was performed for the displaced third fragment during the operation.Postoperative follow-up was performed to compare the fracture healing rate,healing time,and the modified Radiographic Union Scale for Tibia at month 9 after surgery in each group.The effect of third fracture fragment circumference and degree of displacement on fracture healing was assessed. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION:(1)All 142 patients were followed up for at least 12 months,with a mean of(14.7±4.1)months,and the overall healing rate was 73.4%.(2)When the third fragment was displaced by degree I,the healing rate,healing time,and modified Radiographic Union Scale for Tibia score at month 9 were not statistically significant among the three sub-groups of circumference classification.(3)When the third fragments were displaced by degree II or III,the healing rate and healing time were not statistically significant among the three subgroups of circumference classification;the modified Radiographic Union Scale for Tibia score at month 9 in the type 1 group was higher than that in the type 2 and 3 groups(P = 0.017).(4)Logistic regression analysis showed that a greater third fragment displacement and circumference were associated with lower fracture healing rates(P<0.05).(5)These findings indicate that in the treatment of femoral shaft fractures with third fragment by intramedullary nails,when the fracture fragment is displaced to degree I,the circumference size has little effect on fracture healing,and no intervention is required during surgery.When the third fragment is displaced to degree II or III and the circumference of which is type 1,a higher modified Radiographic Union Scale for Tibia score can still be obtained with no intervention of the third fragment.However,when the circumference is of type 2 or type 3,it significantly affects the fracture healing.Consequently,intraoperative intervention to reduce the distance of displacement of the fragment is required to lower the incidence of nonunion.The displacement of the third fracture fragments has a greater impact on fracture healing than their circumference.
5.Effects of targeted inhibition of deubiquitinase USP7/USP47 on proliferation and apoptosis of acute myeloid leukemia cells with or without Flt3-ITD mutation
Qianyu ZHANG ; Yu′ang GAO ; Xin LI ; Yongfeng SU ; Bo CAI ; An WANG ; Jie ZHOU ; Hongmei NING
Chinese Journal of Microbiology and Immunology 2024;44(3):217-224
Objective:To investigate the effects of ubiquitin-specific protease (USP) 7/47 inhibitor (Cat. No. 1247825-37-1) on the proliferation and apoptosis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells with or without internal tandem duplications of the Flt3 gene (Flt3-ITD). Methods:ATP assay was used to detect the effects of 1247825-37-1 on the cell viability of two AML cell lines (MOLM13 and MV4-11) harboring Flt3-ITD mutation and one AML cell line (THP-1) without Flt3-ITD mutation as well as the primary Flt3-ITD-mutant and non-mutant AML cells from patient samples. Flow cytometry was used to detect the apoptosis of AML cell lines treated by different concentrations of 1247825-37-1.Results:Compared with the control group, 1247825-37-1 was able to significantly inhibit the proliferation of MOLM13, MV4-11 and THP-1 cells ( P<0.000 1). Besides, the cell viability of primary AML cells was also inhibited by 1247825-37-1, and a stronger inhibitory effect on non-mutant AML cells was observed. The USP7/USP47 inhibitor 1247825-37-1 could inhibit the proliferation of AML cells in a dose-dependent manner and a low dose (2 or 4 μmol/L) of 1247825-37-1 would be effective. Moreover, 1247825-37-1 was also able to efficiently induce the apoptosis of above AML cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusions:The USP7/USP47 inhibitor 1247825-37-1 significantly inhibits the proliferation of AML cells with or without Flt3-ITD mutation.
6.Effects of Mongolian medicine warm acupuncture on pyroptosis and inflammation in depression model rats
Lixia ZHANG ; Jiuwang YU ; Tingting ZHANG ; Yongfeng BAI
International Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2024;46(11):1469-1474
Objective:To observe the effects of Mongolian medicine warm acupuncture treatment on the behavior and NLRP3, ASC, Caspase-1, GSDMD, and inflammatory factors in hippocampus of the depression model rats; To explore the mechanism.Methods:Totally 40 male SD rats were divided into control group, model group, warm acupuncture group, and fluoxetine group using a random number table method, with 10 rats in each group. Except for the control group, chronic unpredictable stress models were established in all other groups. After 1 hour of daily stress stimulation, the warm acupuncture group received Mongolian medicine warm acupuncture intervention. The fluoxetine group was orally administered with 2.1 mg/kg fluoxetine hydrochloride, while the control group and model group were orally administered with equal volumes of distilled water once a day for 21 days. The body weight of rats was measured, and their behavior was evaluated by sugar water consumption test, open field test, and Morris water maze test. ELISA was used to measure the levels of IL-1 β, IL-18, IL-6, and TNF-α in the serum. Western blot and PCR were used to detect the protein and mRNA levels of NLRP3, ASC, Caspase-1, GSDMD, and IL-1 in the hippocampus.Results:Compared with the model group, the warm acupuncture group and fluoxetine group showed an increase in body weight ( P<0.05), sugar water consumption ( P<0.05), vertical movement frequency and horizontal crossing grid number ( P<0.05), shortened escape latency ( P<0.05), and increased crossing platform frequency ( P<0.05); the levels of serum IL-1β, IL-18, TNF-α, and IL-6 decreased ( P<0.05); the protein and mRNA expressions of NLRP3, Caspase-1, ASC, GSDMD, IL-1β in the hippocampus of rats decreased ( P<0.05). Conclusion:Mongolian medicine warm acupuncture can prevent depressive behaviors in rats by reducing NLRP3-mediated cell death and inflammation.
7.Experts consensus on standard items of the cohort construction and quality control of temporomandibular joint diseases (2024)
Min HU ; Chi YANG ; Huawei LIU ; Haixia LU ; Chen YAO ; Qiufei XIE ; Yongjin CHEN ; Kaiyuan FU ; Bing FANG ; Songsong ZHU ; Qing ZHOU ; Zhiye CHEN ; Yaomin ZHU ; Qingbin ZHANG ; Ying YAN ; Xing LONG ; Zhiyong LI ; Yehua GAN ; Shibin YU ; Yuxing BAI ; Yi ZHANG ; Yanyi WANG ; Jie LEI ; Yong CHENG ; Changkui LIU ; Ye CAO ; Dongmei HE ; Ning WEN ; Shanyong ZHANG ; Minjie CHEN ; Guoliang JIAO ; Xinhua LIU ; Hua JIANG ; Yang HE ; Pei SHEN ; Haitao HUANG ; Yongfeng LI ; Jisi ZHENG ; Jing GUO ; Lisheng ZHAO ; Laiqing XU
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2024;59(10):977-987
Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) diseases are common clinical conditions. The number of patients with TMJ diseases is large, and the etiology, epidemiology, disease spectrum, and treatment of the disease remain controversial and unknown. To understand and master the current situation of the occurrence, development and prevention of TMJ diseases, as well as to identify the patterns in etiology, incidence, drug sensitivity, and prognosis is crucial for alleviating patients′suffering.This will facilitate in-depth medical research, effective disease prevention measures, and the formulation of corresponding health policies. Cohort construction and research has an irreplaceable role in precise disease prevention and significant improvement in diagnosis and treatment levels. Large-scale cohort studies are needed to explore the relationship between potential risk factors and outcomes of TMJ diseases, and to observe disease prognoses through long-term follw-ups. The consensus aims to establish a standard conceptual frame work for a cohort study on patients with TMJ disease while providing ideas for cohort data standards to this condition. TMJ disease cohort data consists of both common data standards applicable to all specific disease cohorts as well as disease-specific data standards. Common data were available for each specific disease cohort. By integrating different cohort research resources, standard problems or study variables can be unified. Long-term follow-up can be performed using consistent definitions and criteria across different projects for better core data collection. It is hoped that this consensus will be facilitate the development cohort studies of TMJ diseases.
8.Thinking of the pathological diagnosis of unexplained liver cirrhosis
Journal of Clinical Hepatology 2023;39(3):498-503
Liver cirrhosis is the final stage of various chronic liver diseases, and the common etiologies of liver cirrhosis include chronic viral hepatitis, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, autoimmune liver diseases, and inherited metabolic liver disease. An accurate etiological diagnosis is an important prerequisite for etiological treatment. Unexplained liver cirrhosis refers to liver cirrhosis without a definite etiology after medical history inquiry, physical examination, and auxiliary examination. At present, liver histopathological examination is a gold standard for the diagnosis of liver cirrhosis and an important basis for exploring the etiology of liver cirrhosis. It may help with the etiological diagnosis of unexplained liver cirrhosis to evaluate the pattern of liver fibrosis, the type of inflammatory injury, and related pathological changes with reference to a comprehensive analysis of related medical history, signs, laboratory examination, and radiological examination. This article reviews the pathological features and diagnostic thinking of unexplained liver cirrhosis.
9.Changes of median nerve F-wave parameters after manual digitorum sensory stimulation of hemiplegic fingers in stroke patients
Yu WU ; Yanjie HU ; Ziyan HE ; Yaxing TIAN ; Yongfeng HONG
Chinese Journal of Neuromedicine 2023;22(3):274-278
Objective:To evaluate the influence of manual digitorum sensory stimulation (MDSS) of hemiplegic fingers in median nerve F-wave in stroke patients.Methods:Thirty patients with hemiplegia after stroke, admitted to Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Second Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University from June 2019 to October 2022 were selected; all patients had thumb flexor modified Ashworth scale (MAS) grading≥1. Hemiplegic MDSS was given; bilateral median nerve F-wave before MDSS and median nerve F-wave at the hemiplegic side immediately after MDSS were recorded.Results:Compared with that at the healthy side before MDSS, amplitude of median nerve F-wave at the hemiplegic side was significantly increased ( P<0.05). Compared with that before MDSS, amplitude of F-wave at the hemiplegic side after MDSS in patients with thumb flexor MAS grading≤2 were significantly decreased ( P<0.05), while that in patients with thumb flexor MAS grading≥3 was significantly increased ( P<0.05). Conclusion:Amplitudes of median nerve F-wave at the hemiplegic side in patients with different thumb flexor MAS grading show that MDSS can not only inhibit the excitability of tonic motor unit related to muscle spasm, but also enhance the excitability of kinetic-motor unit mainly related to explosive power in severe muscle spasm.
10.A resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study of functional connectivity in patients with leukoaraiosis
Shaohua JIN ; Junjie YU ; Minyan LU ; Shaoyun GE ; Zihan LI ; Yongfeng JIA ; Min WANG
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science 2023;32(12):1071-1077
Objective:To investigate the alterations of brain resting-state functional connectivity in patients with leukoaraiosis(LA), and to explore its neuropathological mechanism of cognitive dysfunction.Methods:From August 2022 to February 2023, 28 patients with LA(LA group) and 30 gender, age and education level matched normal controls(NC group) in Jiangsu Shengze Hospital affiliated to Nanjing Medical University were prospectively recruited.Mini mental state examination, trail-making test, and Stroop color-word test were used to evaluate the cognitive function of participants, rs-fMRI images were processed by DPABI V6.1 based on MATLAB R2022a.Voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity(VMHC) values were calculated and two-sample t test were performed to compare the differences in local brain activity between the two groups.The brain regions with significant differences were selected as the seeds to calculate the functional connectivity(FC) values of the whole brain, and Pearson correlation analyses were performed to evaluate the correlation between the FC values and neuropsychological scores. Results:The VMHC values of the calcarine fissure and surrounding cortex(CAL) (x=±18, y=-63, z=15), postcentral gyrus(PoCG) (x=±39, y=-27, z=48), lingual gyrus(LING) (x=±12, y=-51, z=-6), middle occipital gyrus(x=±27, y=-75, z=24) and insula(x=±36, y=6, z=3) in the LA group were lower than those in the NC group( P<0.05). The seed points FC results showed, FC values between right CAL(CAL.R) and bilateral precuneus(PCUN), right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex(DLPFC.R) and right temporal_mid were reduced in the LA group( P<0.05); FC values between PoCG.R and left CAL, left temporal_mid and right LING were reduced too( P<0.05). Additionally, the FC value in the LA group between CAL.R and DLPFC.R was negatively correlated with the Stroop C score( r=-0.39, P<0.05). The FC value in LA group and NC group between CAL.R and DLPFC.R was negatively correlated with the Stroop C score( r=-0.48, P<0.001)and also negatively correlated with the trail making test B(TMT-B) score( r=-0.40, P<0.01), and the FC value between CAL.R and PCUN.L was negatively correlated with the TMT-B score( r=-0.45, P<0.001). Conclusion:Desynchronized interhemispheric functional connectivity and abnormal cortical circuit functional connectivity were probably associated with the underlying neural mechanisms of cognitive impairment in LA.

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