1.Efficacy and safety of double crossover bandaging technique in composite rhytidectomy
Lehao WU ; Mingyu ZHAO ; Yihao XU ; Yuanshun NAN ; Huimin LUO ; Zhiliang HE ; Yao WANG ; Bin HOU ; Tailing WANG ; Jiaqi WANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Aesthetics and Cosmetology 2025;31(3):258-263
Objective:To investigate the effect and safety of the double-cross dressing technique for composite rhytidectomy.Methods:A retrospective analysis was performed on a total of 121 patients with face and neck ageing, who were admitted to the Facial and Neck Plastic Surgery Center, the Plastic Surgery Hospital of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences from June 2020 to May 2023, all female with the age ranged 34-72 years old. All the patients underwent a full facial and neck composite rhytidectomy. Immediately after surgery, a double-cross bandaging was applied. The cotton pad was nested on the outer auricle, so that the front of the ear and the back of the ear were the first cross. This cross aimed to accurately pressurized the temporal, buccal region and postauricle flap. The second cross occurred at the radix. It secured composite tissue flap at the zygomatic arch and the buccal fat pad zone. Patient′s external auricle was not compressed after bandaging. The healing and the occurrence of complications were observed.Results:All the patients were satisfied with the comfort of the bandaging, the satisfied rate was 100% (121/121). All the patients had different degrees of periocular and perioral swelling 72 hours after surgery. Conjunctival edema and xanthochromia occurred in 30 patients, and oral mucosal congestion occurred in 25 patients, all of which were spontaneously resolved 2-4 weeks after surgery. Postoperative nursing was easily managed. There were no events such as dressing loosening, blocked draining tubes, and difficulty in replacing tubes. All the patients were followed up for 3-12 months after surgery, the flap in the postauricular area of all patients healed well, and there were no adverse complications such as wound infection, necrosis of the flap in the operative area, and delayed healing of the incision.Conclusion:The double-cross bandaging technique achieves the comfort bandaging and good protection of the face, which is safe and effective.
2.Update on the treatment navigation for functional cure of chronic hepatitis B: Expert consensus 2.0
Di WU ; Jia-Horng KAO ; Teerha PIRATVISUTH ; Xiaojing WANG ; Patrick T.F. KENNEDY ; Motoyuki OTSUKA ; Sang Hoon AHN ; Yasuhito TANAKA ; Guiqiang WANG ; Zhenghong YUAN ; Wenhui LI ; Young-Suk LIM ; Junqi NIU ; Fengmin LU ; Wenhong ZHANG ; Zhiliang GAO ; Apichat KAEWDECH ; Meifang HAN ; Weiming YAN ; Hong REN ; Peng HU ; Sainan SHU ; Paul Yien KWO ; Fu-sheng WANG ; Man-Fung YUEN ; Qin NING
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2025;31(Suppl):S134-S164
As new evidence emerges, treatment strategies toward the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B are evolving. In 2019, a panel of national hepatologists published a Consensus Statement on the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B. Currently, an international group of hepatologists has been assembled to evaluate research since the publication of the original consensus, and to collaboratively develop the updated statements. The 2.0 Consensus was aimed to update the original consensus with the latest available studies, and provide a comprehensive overview of the current relevant scientific literatures regarding functional cure of hepatitis B, with a particular focus on issues that are not yet fully clarified. These cover the definition of functional cure of hepatitis B, its mechanisms and barriers, the effective strategies and treatment roadmap to achieve this endpoint, in particular new surrogate biomarkers used to measure efficacy or to predict response, and the appropriate approach to pursuing a functional cure in special populations, the development of emerging antivirals and immunomodulators with potential for curing hepatitis B. The statements are primarily intended to offer international guidance for clinicians in their practice to enhance the functional cure rate of chronic hepatitis B.
3.Update on the treatment navigation for functional cure of chronic hepatitis B: Expert consensus 2.0
Di WU ; Jia-Horng KAO ; Teerha PIRATVISUTH ; Xiaojing WANG ; Patrick T.F. KENNEDY ; Motoyuki OTSUKA ; Sang Hoon AHN ; Yasuhito TANAKA ; Guiqiang WANG ; Zhenghong YUAN ; Wenhui LI ; Young-Suk LIM ; Junqi NIU ; Fengmin LU ; Wenhong ZHANG ; Zhiliang GAO ; Apichat KAEWDECH ; Meifang HAN ; Weiming YAN ; Hong REN ; Peng HU ; Sainan SHU ; Paul Yien KWO ; Fu-sheng WANG ; Man-Fung YUEN ; Qin NING
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2025;31(Suppl):S134-S164
As new evidence emerges, treatment strategies toward the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B are evolving. In 2019, a panel of national hepatologists published a Consensus Statement on the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B. Currently, an international group of hepatologists has been assembled to evaluate research since the publication of the original consensus, and to collaboratively develop the updated statements. The 2.0 Consensus was aimed to update the original consensus with the latest available studies, and provide a comprehensive overview of the current relevant scientific literatures regarding functional cure of hepatitis B, with a particular focus on issues that are not yet fully clarified. These cover the definition of functional cure of hepatitis B, its mechanisms and barriers, the effective strategies and treatment roadmap to achieve this endpoint, in particular new surrogate biomarkers used to measure efficacy or to predict response, and the appropriate approach to pursuing a functional cure in special populations, the development of emerging antivirals and immunomodulators with potential for curing hepatitis B. The statements are primarily intended to offer international guidance for clinicians in their practice to enhance the functional cure rate of chronic hepatitis B.
4.Naringenin: A potential therapeutic agent for modulating angiogenesis and immune response in hepatocellular carcinoma.
Wenmei WU ; Xiangyu QIU ; Xiaofan YE ; Zhiliang ZHANG ; Siguo XU ; Xiuqi YAO ; Yinyi DU ; Geyan WU ; Rongxin ZHANG ; Jinrong ZHU
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(9):101254-101254
Naringenin (4,5,7-trihydroxyflavonoid) is a naturally occurring bioflavonoid found in citrus fruits, which plays an important role in metabolic syndrome, neurological disorders, and cardiovascular diseases. However, the pharmacological mechanism and biological function of naringenin on anti-angiogenesis and anti-tumor immunity have not yet been elucidated. Our study firstly demonstrates that naringenin inhibits the growth of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells both in vivo and in vitro. Naringenin diminishes the ability of HCC cells to induce tube formation and migration of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and suppresses neovascularization in chicken chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assays. Meanwhile, in vivo results demonstrate that naringenin can significantly upregulate level of CD8+ T cells, subsequently increasing the level of immune-related cytokines in the tumor immune microenvironment. Mechanistically, we found that naringenin facilitate the K48-linked ubiquitination and subsequent protein degradation of vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) and mesenchymal-epithelial transition factor (c-Met), which reduces the expression of programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1). Importantly, combination therapy naringenin with PD-L1 antibody or bevacizumab provided better therapeutic effects in liver cancer. Our study reveals that naringenin can effectively inhibit angiogenesis and anti-tumor immunity in liver cancer by degradation of VEGFA and c-Met in a K48-linked ubiquitination manner. This work enlightens the potential effect of naringenin as a promising therapeutic strategy against anti-angiogenesis and anti-tumor immunity in HCC.
5.Basiliximab is superior to low dose rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin in pediatric kidney transplant recipients: The younger, the better.
Lan ZHU ; Lei ZHANG ; Wenjun SHANG ; Wenhua LIU ; Rula SA ; Zhiliang GUO ; Longshan LIU ; Jinghong TAN ; Hengxi ZHANG ; Yonghua FENG ; Wenyu ZHAO ; Wenqi CONG ; Jianyong WU ; Changxi WANG ; Gang CHEN
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(2):225-227
6.Update on the treatment navigation for functional cure of chronic hepatitis B: Expert consensus 2.0
Di WU ; Jia-Horng KAO ; Teerha PIRATVISUTH ; Xiaojing WANG ; Patrick T.F. KENNEDY ; Motoyuki OTSUKA ; Sang Hoon AHN ; Yasuhito TANAKA ; Guiqiang WANG ; Zhenghong YUAN ; Wenhui LI ; Young-Suk LIM ; Junqi NIU ; Fengmin LU ; Wenhong ZHANG ; Zhiliang GAO ; Apichat KAEWDECH ; Meifang HAN ; Weiming YAN ; Hong REN ; Peng HU ; Sainan SHU ; Paul Yien KWO ; Fu-sheng WANG ; Man-Fung YUEN ; Qin NING
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2025;31(Suppl):S134-S164
As new evidence emerges, treatment strategies toward the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B are evolving. In 2019, a panel of national hepatologists published a Consensus Statement on the functional cure of chronic hepatitis B. Currently, an international group of hepatologists has been assembled to evaluate research since the publication of the original consensus, and to collaboratively develop the updated statements. The 2.0 Consensus was aimed to update the original consensus with the latest available studies, and provide a comprehensive overview of the current relevant scientific literatures regarding functional cure of hepatitis B, with a particular focus on issues that are not yet fully clarified. These cover the definition of functional cure of hepatitis B, its mechanisms and barriers, the effective strategies and treatment roadmap to achieve this endpoint, in particular new surrogate biomarkers used to measure efficacy or to predict response, and the appropriate approach to pursuing a functional cure in special populations, the development of emerging antivirals and immunomodulators with potential for curing hepatitis B. The statements are primarily intended to offer international guidance for clinicians in their practice to enhance the functional cure rate of chronic hepatitis B.
7.Effect of preoperative chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy in a colorectal cancer patient with KRAS mutation
Yi JIANG ; Chenhao HUANG ; Zhiliang LI ; Junwei WU ; Ren ZHAO ; Tao ZHANG
Journal of Shanghai Jiaotong University(Medical Science) 2025;45(9):1256-1260
Colorectal cancer(CRC),a highly prevalent malignant tumor worldwide,has shown a continuously increasing incidence,particularly with the rise of early-onset CRC in young populations.Neoadjuvant therapy,as an important strategy for locally advanced CRC,shows significant potential to downstage tumors,improve radical surgical cure rates,and enhance prognosis.In this paper,a 39-year-old male patient with sigmoid colon adenocarcinoma at clinical stage cT4aN2aM0(stage ⅢC)is reported.Genetic testing revealed a mutation in the oncogene KRAS(G13D)and microsatellite stability(MSS).The patient also had significantly elevated carcinoembryonic antigen(CEA),lymph node metastasis,and suspected pelvic implant nodules,with a high risk of invasiveness and potential peritoneal metastasis.Because he had a refractory subtype of CRC with poor response to traditional immunotherapy,the patient was treated with neoadjuvant therapy,comprising CapeOx regimen(capecitabine+oxaliplatin),followed sequentially by sluzumab;after 6 treatment cycles,the tumor shrank significantly,and laparoscopic radical sigmoid colon resection was successfully performed,with no residual(ypT0N0)confirmed by postoperative pathology.This case suggests that for patients with KRAS-mutated MSS CRC resistant to traditional immunotherapy,a combination of CapeOx chemotherapy followed by programmed death-1(PD-1)inhibitors may induce a deep pathological response and provide translational treatment opportunities for locally advanced patients.However,the universality and long-term benefits of this treatment regimen still require further longitudinal studies and clinical follow-up.
8.Effect of preoperative chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy in a colorectal cancer patient with KRAS mutation
Yi JIANG ; Chenhao HUANG ; Zhiliang LI ; Junwei WU ; Ren ZHAO ; Tao ZHANG
Journal of Shanghai Jiaotong University(Medical Science) 2025;45(9):1256-1260
Colorectal cancer(CRC),a highly prevalent malignant tumor worldwide,has shown a continuously increasing incidence,particularly with the rise of early-onset CRC in young populations.Neoadjuvant therapy,as an important strategy for locally advanced CRC,shows significant potential to downstage tumors,improve radical surgical cure rates,and enhance prognosis.In this paper,a 39-year-old male patient with sigmoid colon adenocarcinoma at clinical stage cT4aN2aM0(stage ⅢC)is reported.Genetic testing revealed a mutation in the oncogene KRAS(G13D)and microsatellite stability(MSS).The patient also had significantly elevated carcinoembryonic antigen(CEA),lymph node metastasis,and suspected pelvic implant nodules,with a high risk of invasiveness and potential peritoneal metastasis.Because he had a refractory subtype of CRC with poor response to traditional immunotherapy,the patient was treated with neoadjuvant therapy,comprising CapeOx regimen(capecitabine+oxaliplatin),followed sequentially by sluzumab;after 6 treatment cycles,the tumor shrank significantly,and laparoscopic radical sigmoid colon resection was successfully performed,with no residual(ypT0N0)confirmed by postoperative pathology.This case suggests that for patients with KRAS-mutated MSS CRC resistant to traditional immunotherapy,a combination of CapeOx chemotherapy followed by programmed death-1(PD-1)inhibitors may induce a deep pathological response and provide translational treatment opportunities for locally advanced patients.However,the universality and long-term benefits of this treatment regimen still require further longitudinal studies and clinical follow-up.
9.Efficacy and safety of double crossover bandaging technique in composite rhytidectomy
Lehao WU ; Mingyu ZHAO ; Yihao XU ; Yuanshun NAN ; Huimin LUO ; Zhiliang HE ; Yao WANG ; Bin HOU ; Tailing WANG ; Jiaqi WANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Aesthetics and Cosmetology 2025;31(3):258-263
Objective:To investigate the effect and safety of the double-cross dressing technique for composite rhytidectomy.Methods:A retrospective analysis was performed on a total of 121 patients with face and neck ageing, who were admitted to the Facial and Neck Plastic Surgery Center, the Plastic Surgery Hospital of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences from June 2020 to May 2023, all female with the age ranged 34-72 years old. All the patients underwent a full facial and neck composite rhytidectomy. Immediately after surgery, a double-cross bandaging was applied. The cotton pad was nested on the outer auricle, so that the front of the ear and the back of the ear were the first cross. This cross aimed to accurately pressurized the temporal, buccal region and postauricle flap. The second cross occurred at the radix. It secured composite tissue flap at the zygomatic arch and the buccal fat pad zone. Patient′s external auricle was not compressed after bandaging. The healing and the occurrence of complications were observed.Results:All the patients were satisfied with the comfort of the bandaging, the satisfied rate was 100% (121/121). All the patients had different degrees of periocular and perioral swelling 72 hours after surgery. Conjunctival edema and xanthochromia occurred in 30 patients, and oral mucosal congestion occurred in 25 patients, all of which were spontaneously resolved 2-4 weeks after surgery. Postoperative nursing was easily managed. There were no events such as dressing loosening, blocked draining tubes, and difficulty in replacing tubes. All the patients were followed up for 3-12 months after surgery, the flap in the postauricular area of all patients healed well, and there were no adverse complications such as wound infection, necrosis of the flap in the operative area, and delayed healing of the incision.Conclusion:The double-cross bandaging technique achieves the comfort bandaging and good protection of the face, which is safe and effective.
10.Efficacy evaluation of extending or switching to tenofovir amibufenamide in patients with chronic hepatitis B: a phase Ⅲ randomized controlled study
Zhihong LIU ; Qinglong JIN ; Yuexin ZHANG ; Guozhong GONG ; Guicheng WU ; Lvfeng YAO ; Xiaofeng WEN ; Zhiliang GAO ; Yan HUANG ; Daokun YANG ; Enqiang CHEN ; Qing MAO ; Shide LIN ; Jia SHANG ; Huanyu GONG ; Lihua ZHONG ; Huafa YIN ; Fengmei WANG ; Peng HU ; Xiaoqing ZHANG ; Qunjie GAO ; Chaonan JIN ; Chuan LI ; Junqi NIU ; Jinlin HOU
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2024;32(10):883-892
Objective:In chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients with previous 96-week treatment with tenofovir amibufenamide (TMF) or tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), we investigated the efficacy of sequential TMF treatment from 96 to 144 weeks.Methods:Enrolled subjects who were previously assigned (2:1) to receive either 25 mg TMF or 300 mg TDF with matching placebo for 96 weeks received extended or switched TMF treatment for 48 weeks. Efficacy was evaluated based on virological, serological, biological parameters, and fibrosis staging. Statistical analysis was performed using the McNemar test, t-test, or Log-Rank test according to the data. Results:593 subjects from the initial TMF group and 287 subjects from the TDF group were included at week 144, with the proportions of HBV DNA<20 IU/ml at week 144 being 86.2% and 83.3%, respectively, and 78.1% and 73.8% in patients with baseline HBV DNA levels ≥8 log10 IU/ml. Resistance to tenofovir was not detected in both groups. For HBeAg loss and seroconversion rates, both groups showed a further increase from week 96 to 144 and the 3-year cumulative rates of HBeAg loss were about 35% in each group. However, HBsAg levels were less affected during 96 to 144 weeks. For patients switched from TDF to TMF, a substantial further increase in the alanine aminotransferase (ALT) normalization rate was observed (11.4%), along with improved FIB-4 scores.Conclusion:After 144 weeks of TMF treatment, CHB patients achieved high rates of virological, serological, and biochemical responses, as well as improved liver fibrosis outcomes. Also, switching to TMF resulted in significant benefits in ALT normalization rates (NCT03903796).

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