1.Methodology for Developing Rapid and Living Guidelines of Traditional Chinese Medicine (RALIG-TCM) (Part 1):Concept and Current Practice
Lijiao YAN ; Ning LIANG ; Ziteng HU ; Yujing ZHANG ; Yaxin CHEN ; Fuqiang ZHANG ; Xiaoling LI ; Wenjie CAO ; Chen ZHAO ; Cheng LYU ; Nannan SHI ; Yanping WANG
Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2024;65(3):269-274
Rapid and living guidelines are those developed in response to public health emergencies in a short period of time using a scientific and standardized approach. Subsequently, they provide timely and credible recommendations for decision makers through regular and frequent updates of clinical evidence and recommendations. In this paper, we introduced the definition of rapid and living guideline as well as analyzed the basic characteristics of eight rapid and living guidelines in the field of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) published till 2023 June, summarizing three core methodological issues in relation to how to rapidly develop guidelines, how to formulate recommendations when there is lack of evidence, and how to ensure the timeliness of guidelines. Based on the analysis of current rapid and living guidelines, it is implicated that there is necessity to carry out rapid and living guideline in the field of TCM, and the methodology of rapid integration of multivariate evidence in the field of TCM needs to be further explored; furthermore, it is necessary to further explore the obstacles of implementation of guidelines and promote timely updating, all of which provide certain theoretical references for relevant guideline developers and researchers.
2.Methodology for Developing Rapid and Living Guidelines of Traditional Chinese Medicine (RALIG-TCM) (Part 2): Development Process and Key Steps during Preparation Stage
Yujing ZHANG ; Lijiao YAN ; Ziteng HU ; Yaxin CHEN ; Xiaoling LI ; Qianzi CHE ; Jingya WANG ; An LI ; Nannan SHI ; Yanping WANG ; Ning LIANG
Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2024;65(3):275-280
It is necessary to develop rapid and living guidelines in order to improve the evidence translation and guidance for clinical practice in emergency situations, and to enhance the participation of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in management of emergencies. This paper introduced the process of developing rapid and living guidelines of TCM and divided it into three stages, that is preparation, rapid development and dynamic updating, which highlights the features of rapid development, high quality, and dynamic updating and the integration with the predominance of TCM. By comparing with general guidelines on composition, personnel number, timing to formulate and communication patterns of the guideline working groups, as well as the content and number of clinical questions, this paper mainly gave suggestions on how to formulate a concise but authoritative team during the preparation stage, how to efficiently manage the guideline team and promote the development process from conflict of interest management, working and communication mode adjustment, and how to formulate and update the important and prioritized clinical questions, all of which may provide reference for the development of TCM rapid and living guidelines.
3.Methodology for Developing Rapid and Living Guidelines of Traditional Chinese Medicine (RALIG-TCM) (Part 3): Rapid Evidence Collection, Integration and Recommendation Formation
Ziteng HU ; Lijiao YAN ; Yujing ZHANG ; Yaxin CHEN ; Xiaoling LI ; Haili ZHANG ; Huizhen LI ; Jingya WANG ; An LI ; Zhao CHEN ; Ning LIANG ; Nannan SHI ; Yanping WANG
Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2024;65(3):281-286
The lack of direct evidence is an important problem faced in the formation of recommendations in rapid living guidelines of traditional Chinese medicine under public health emergencies, and the supplementation of indirect evidence can be a key method to solve this problem. For the collection of evidence, the type of evidence required, including direct and indirect evidence, should be clarified, and ‘direct first’ principle for selecting evidence can be set to standardize and accelerate the guideline development. When integrating evidence, recommendations can be formed directly if there is sufficient direct evidence, while regarding insufficient direct evidence, recommendations need to be supplemented and improved by integrating indirect evidence. In addition, when the body of evidence contains evidence from multiple sources, it is suggested to rate the evidence according to “higher rather than lower” principle. Finally, when forming recommendations, the level of evidence, safety and economic efficiency should be taken into consideration to determine the strength of the recommendation.
4.Methodology for Developing Rapid and Living Guidelines of Traditional Chinese Medicine (RALIG-TCM) (Part 4): Evidence Monitoring and Dynamic Updates
Lijiao YAN ; Ning LIANG ; Yujing ZHANG ; Ziteng HU ; Yaxin CHEN ; Xiaoling LI ; Wenjie CAO ; Huizhen LI ; Xingyu ZONG ; Chen ZHAO ; Cheng LYU ; Nannan SHI ; Yanping WANG
Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2024;65(3):287-291
In developing rapid and living guidelines of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in response to public health emergencies, it is important that evidence continue to be reviewed, and clinical questions and recommendations updated if necessary, due to the rapid changes in disease progression and the continuous generation of relevant research evidence. This paper proposed that the updating scope in dynamic mode should first be identified; then evidence monitoring should be carried out in four aspects, including clinical research, related guidelines or laws and regulations, disease progression, as well as clinical use of recommendations and clinical needs; finally, based on the results of the evidence monitoring, different options should be made, including revising the clinical questions, updating the evidence and recommendations, and withdrawing the guideline.
5.Types of Major Microorganisms in Pharmaceutical Water Systems and Control Measures
Yinghong LI ; Linshuang ZHANG ; Jue LI ; Xiaoling ZHENG ; Zhengnan WANG ; Yinhuan WANG ; Junhao CHEN ; Liang HONG ; Qiaofeng TAO ; Huan CHEN
Chinese Journal of Modern Applied Pharmacy 2024;41(3):415-419
OBJECTIVE
To analyze the types and control measures of major microorganisms in pharmaceutical water systems, so as to provide guidance for effective control of pharmaceutical water systems.
METHODS
The main microbial species, abundance and harmfulness of drinking water, purified water and water for injection were reviewed, and the control measures on microorganisms in pharmaceutical water were discussed.
RESULTS
There were differences in the main microbial types in pharmaceutical water. Burkholderia cepacia complex and Ralstonia pickettii were conditioned pathogens in pharmaceutical water, thus causing certain biological safety hazards.
CONCLUSION
Pharmaceutical companies can strengthen the control of microorganisms in the water system by establishing microbial databases and common microbial strain banks at all levels. Trend analysis should to be conducted based on alert limits and action limits, so as to strengthen the control of microorganisms in the water system.
6.Epidemiological characteristics of human respiratory syncytial virus among acute respiratory infection cases in 16 provinces of China from 2009 to 2023
Aili CUI ; Baicheng XIA ; Zhen ZHU ; Zhibo XIE ; Liwei SUN ; Jin XU ; Jing XU ; Zhong LI ; Linqing ZHAO ; Xiaoru LONG ; Deshan YU ; Bing ZHU ; Feng ZHANG ; Min MU ; Hui XIE ; Liang CAI ; Yun ZHU ; Xiaoling TIAN ; Bing WANG ; Zhenguo GAO ; Xiaoqing LIU ; Binzhi REN ; Guangyue HAN ; Kongxin HU ; Yan ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2024;58(7):945-951
Objective:To understand the epidemiological characteristics of human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) among acute respiratory infection (ARI) cases in 16 provinces of China from 2009 to 2023.Methods:The data of this study were collected from the ARI surveillance data from 16 provinces in China from 2009 to 2023, with a total of 28 278 ARI cases included in the study. The clinical specimens from ARI cases were screened for HRSV nucleic acid from 2009 to 2023, and differences in virus detection rates among cases of different age groups, regions, and months were analyzed.Results:A total of 28 278 ARI cases were enrolled from January 2009 to September 2023. The age of the cases ranged from<1 month to 112 years, and the age M ( Q1, Q3) was 3 years (1 year, 9 years). Among them, 3 062 cases were positive for HRSV nucleic acid, with a total detection rate of 10.83%. From 2009 to 2019, the detection rate of HRSV was 9.33%, and the virus was mainly prevalent in winter and spring. During the Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the detection rate of HRSV fluctuated between 6.32% and 18.67%. There was no traditional winter epidemic peak of HRSV from the end of 2022 to the beginning of 2023, and an anti-seasonal epidemic of HRSV occurred from April to May 2023. About 87.95% (2 693/3 062) of positive cases were children under 5 years old, and the difference in the detection rate of HRSV among different age groups was statistically significant ( P<0.001), showing a decreasing trend of HRSV detection rate with the increase of age ( P<0.001). Among them, the HRSV detection rate (25.69%) was highest in children under 6 months. Compared with 2009-2019, the ranking of HRSV detection rates in different age groups changed from high to low between 2020 and 2023, with the age M (Q1, Q3) of HRSV positive cases increasing from 1 year (6 months, 3 years) to 2 years (11 months, 3 years). Conclusion:Through 15 years of continuous HRSV surveillance analysis, children under 5 years old, especially infants under 6 months old, are the main high-risk population for HRSV infection. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the prevalence and patterns of HRSV in China have changed.
7.Spatial distribution pattern of local tumor progression analysis after microwave ablation of hepatocellular carcinoma based on three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging
Fangying FAN ; Wenzhen DING ; Fangyi LIU ; Zhigang CHENG ; Zhiyu HAN ; Xiaoling YU ; Ping LIANG ; Jie YU
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2024;32(3):208-213
Objective:To investigate the spatial distribution pattern of local tumor progression (LTP) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) ≤5 cm after microwave ablation.Methods:A retrospective analysis was performed on 169 HCCs with matched MRI before and after ablation from December 2009 to December 2019. A tumor MRI was reconstructed using three-dimensional visualization technology. LTP was classified as contact or non-contact, early or late stage, according to whether LTP was in contact with the edge of the ablation zone and the occurrence time (24 months). The tumor-surrounded area was divided into eight quadrants by using the eight-quadrant map method. An analysis was conducted on the spatial correlation between the quadrant where the ablative margin (AM) safety boundary was located and the quadrant where different types of LTP occurred. The t-test, or rank-sum test, was used for the measurement data. 2-test for count data was used to compare the difference between the two groups.Results:The AM quadrant had a distribution of 54.4% LTP, 64.2% early LTP stage, and 69.1% contact LTP, suggesting this quadrant was much more concentrated than the other quadrants ( P ?0.001). Additionally, the AM quadrant had only 15.2% of non-contact type LTP and 17.1% of late LTP, which was not significantly different from the average distribution probability of 12.5% (100/8%) among the eight quadrants ( P = 0.667, 0.743). 46.6% of early contact type LTP was located at the ablation needle tip, 25.2% at the body, and 28.1% at the caudal, while the location distribution probabilities of non-early contact LTP were 34.8%, 31.8%, and 33.3%, respectively. Conclusion:LTP mostly occurs in areas where the ablation safety boundary is the shortest. However, non-contact LTP and late LTP stages exhibit the feature of uniform distribution. Thus, this type of LPT may result from an inadequate non-ablation safety boundary.
8.Curative effect of percutaneous microwave ablation therapy on hepatocellular carcinoma survival: a 15-year real-world study
Yanchun LUO ; Manlin LANG ; Wenjia CAI ; Zhiyu HAN ; Fangyi LIU ; Zhigang CHENG ; Xiaoling YU ; Jianping DOU ; Xin LI ; Shuilian TAN ; Xuejuan DONG ; Ping LIANG ; Jie YU
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2024;32(4):332-339
Objective:To evaluate the long-term efficacy of percutaneous microwave ablation (MWA) therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma.Methods:2054 cases with Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) stage 0~B at the Fifth Medical Center of the Chinese People's Liberation Army General Hospital from January 2006 to September 2020 were retrospectively collected. All patients were followed up for at least 2 years. The primary endpoint of overall survival and secondary endpoints (tumor-related survival, disease-free survival, and postoperative complications) of patients treated with ultrasound-guided percutaneous MWA were analyzed. Kaplan-Meier method was used for stratified survival rate analysis. Fine-and-Gray competing risk model was used to analyze overall survival.Results:A total of 5 503 HCC nodules [mean tumor diameter (2.6±1.6) cm] underwent 3 908 MWAs between January 2006 and September 2020, with a median follow-up time of 45.6 (24.0 -79.2) months.The technical effectiveness rate of 5 375 tumor nodules was 97.5%. The overall survival rates at 5, 10, and 15-years were 61.6%, 38.8%, and 27.0%, respectively. The tumor-specific survival rates were 67.1%, 47.2%, and 37.7%, respectively. The free tumor survival rates were 25.8%, 15.7%, and 9.9%, respectively. The incidence rate of severe complications was 2.8% (108/3 908). Further analysis showed that the technical effectiveness and survival rate over the passing three time periods from January 2006-2010, 2011-2015, and 2016-September 2020 were significantly increased, with P ?0.001, especially for liver cancer 3.1~5.0 cm ( P ?0.001). Conclusion:Microwave ablation therapy is a safe and effective method for BCLC stage 0-B, with significantly enhanced technical efficacy and survival rate over time.
9.Comparison on prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma patients with hepatitis B and hepatitis C after microwave ablation
Luo WANG ; Jie YU ; Yanchun LUO ; Xiaoling YU ; Jing ZHANG ; Zhigang CHENG ; Zhiyu HAN ; Fangyi LIU ; Ping LIANG
Chinese Journal of Interventional Imaging and Therapy 2024;21(5):262-267
Objective To comparatively explore the prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC)patients with hepatitis B(HB)and hepatitis C(HC)after microwave ablation(MWA).Methods Data of 159 HCC patients with HB(HB-HCC)and 159 HCC patients with HC(HC-HCC)who received MWA treatment were retrospectively collected.The oncologic outcomes were compared between groups,the causes of death were analyzed,and the risk factors of overall survival(OS)in HCC patients after MWA were observed.Results The OS rate in HC-HCC group was lower than that in HB-HCC group(P=0.045),while no significant difference of disease free survival rate(P=0.095)nor cancer specific survival rate(P=0.180)was found between groups.Compared with HB-HCC group,HC-HCC group had higher risk of death due to complications related to liver cirrhosis(HR=2.339,P=0.043).Child-Pugh class B(HR=3.082,P<0.001),hepatitis viral load>500 IU/ml(HR=1.654,P=0.006)and the maximum diameter of lesion≥3.0 cm(HR=1.541,P=0.017)were all independent risk factors of OS in HCC patients after MWA.Conclusion Compared with HB-HCC patients,HC-HCC patients had shorter OS after MWA.
10.Quantitative CT for assessing complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus
Xiaojun CHEN ; Jin LIU ; Xiaoling LIANG ; Jun GONG ; Shaolin LI
Chinese Journal of Interventional Imaging and Therapy 2024;21(11):702-707
Objective To explore the value of quantitative CT(QCT)for assessing complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus(T2DM).Methods Totally 220 T2DM patients were included and divided into uncomplicated group(n=40),mono-complicated group(n=84)and multi-complicated group(n=96).Bone mineral density(BMD)of L2—L4,as well as visceral adipose tissue(VAT)and subcutaneous adipose tissue(SAT)area were collected using QCT and compared among groups.The operator characteristic curves were drawn,and the area under the curves(AUC)were calculated to observe the value of QCT indicators and comprehensive model based on clinical indicators and QCT indicators for evaluating complications of T2DM.Decision curve analysis(DCA)and clinical impact curve(CIC)analysis were used to analyze the clinical application value of the comprehensive model.Results Significant differences of patients’age,lumbar BMDs and areas of VAT were found among 3 groups(all P<0.05).The AUC of comprehensive model for differentiating uncomplicated group from mono-complicated group,uncomplicated group from multi-complicated group and mono-complicated group from multi-complicated group was 0.753,0.865,and 0.761,respectively,higher than that of BMD,VAT and SAT area(all P<0.05).DCA and CIC analyses showed that comprehensive model yielded clinical benefits and had good clinical applicability for assessing complications of T2DM.Conclusion QCT was valuable for assessing complications of T2DM.


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