1.Hepatitis E virus infection among blood donors in Ningbo
Mingxi PENG ; Yiyu LIU ; Huyan MAO ; Dan LIN ; Lu XIN ; Ning SHU ; Jianfeng HAN ; Feng DING
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion 2025;38(1):7-12
[Objective] To investigate the infection status and characteristics of HEV among voluntary blood donors in Ningbo, and to provide a basis for improving the blood screening strategy. [Methods] A total of 12 227 blood samples from voluntary blood donors in Ningbo from June 2022 to May 2023 were tested for HEV serology, enzymology, and nucleic acid testing. Furthermore, HEV gene sequencing was performed for genotyping analysis, and donors with reactive nucleic acid testing results were followed up to confirm their infection status. [Results] The reactivity rate of HEV Ag, anti-HEV IgM and anti-HEV IgG was 0.098%, 0.899% and 29.198%, respectively. There was no difference in the reactivity of anti-HEV IgM and anti-HEV IgG between genders, donation frequencies and donation types (P>0.05). The reactivity rate increased significantly with age (P<0.05). The rate of ALT disqualification (ALT>50U/L) was significantly higher than that in non-reactive samples (P<0.05). The HEV Ag reactivity rate (0.098%) was not correlated with gender, donation frequency, donation type or age. One HEV RNA positive case was found, with a positive rate of 0.008%(1/12 227). It was confirmed to be hepatitis E virus genotype 3 by sequencing analysis. Apart from HEV Ag reactivity, all other blood safety screening items were non-reactive, suggesting this case might be in the acute infection phase. The follow-up results showed that all indicators of the donor's previous blood donation were non-reactive. [Conclusion] Pre-donation ALT detection can reduce the risk of transfusion-transmitted HEV (TT-HEV) to a certain extent, and the effective way to prevent TT-HEV is to detect HEV RNA and serology of donor blood.
2.Analysis of the efficacy of adjusting the dose of imatinib with therapeutic drug monitoring in adjuvant treatment after complete resection of gastrointestinal stromal tumors
Zhiliang CHEN ; Hongkun TIAN ; Jianing DING ; Zhiying LI ; Gan MAO ; Yuqiang DU ; Qian SHEN ; Hong ZHOU ; Yong HAN ; Xiangyu ZENG ; Kaixiong TAO ; Peng ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(11):1148-1154
Objective:To explore the efficacy of adjusting the dose of imatinib dose in the context of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in patients with gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) who are receiving adjuvant therapy after complete resection of their tumors.Methods:This was a descriptive study. Inclusion criteria were (1) complete surgical resection with a pathological diagnosis of GIST, (2) postoperative adjuvant therapy with imatinib and dosage adjustment, (3) multiple TDM of imatinib, and (4) complete clinical, pathological, and follow-up data. The data of 70 patients with GISTs treated at Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology between January 2015 and December 2023 were collected retrospectively. The study cohort comprised 15 (21.4%) men and 55 (78.6%) women of median age 60 years (range: 25–82). Of the eligible patients, 49 (70.0%) were at high-risk, 14 (20.0%) at intermediate-risk, six (8.6%) at low-risk, and one (1.4%) at very low risk. Patients were followed up by the gastrointestinal stromal tumor clinic every 2–3 months and their plasma concentrations of imatinib were checked. The dose was adjusted to 300 mg/d or 200 mg/d depending on whether they had had ≥ grade III adverse reactions, and whether the first plasma concentration of imatinib was ≥ 1,500 μg/L or between the expected range of 760 μg/L–1,100 μg/L. Studied indicators included adverse reactions, quality of life before and after dose adjustment, and overall survival and recurrence-free survival (RFS) after dose adjustment.Results:Before dose adjustment, all 70 patients received 400 mg of imatinib daily, with initial TDM values of 1,900 ± 568 μg/L, for a median duration of 8.3 months. After dose adjustment, 60 patients received 300 mg daily, with a TDM of 1,216 ± 350 μg/L, whereas 10 received 200 mg daily, with a TDM of 1,023 ± 269 μg/L. The median duration of treatment after dose adjustment was 23.4 months. Compared with those whose dosages were not adjusted, the incidence of bone marrow suppression was significantly lower (74.3% [52/70] vs. 51.4% [36/70], χ 2=9.202, P=0.010); as were the incidences of edema (95.7% [67/70] vs. 50.0% [35/70], χ 2=40.526, P<0.001); skin reactions (70.0% [49/70] vs. 32.9% [23/70), χ 2=22.495, P<0.001); and gastrointestinal reactions (38.6% [27/70] vs. 10.0% [7/70], χ 2=15.899, P<0.001) in those whose dosages were adjusted. The average total scores for physical health before and after dose adjustment were 76 ± 5 and 88 ± 4, respectively; whereas the mental health scores were 75 ± 6 and 89 ± 4, respectively. The median follow-up period was 36 months (range 6–126). During the first 3 years of follow-up, five high-risk patients with non-gastric GISTs developed recurrences. The 3-year overall survival rate was 100%, and the 3-year RFS rate was 92.8%, high-risk patients having a 3-year RFS rate of 89.8%. Conclusion:The adverse reactions and quality of life of GIST patients with severe adverse reactions to adjuvant imatinib therapy after complete resection can be mitigated by appropriately reducing the dosage of imatinib under the guidance of TDM.
3.Effect and mechanism of dexmedetomidine on alleviating heat stroke related rhabdomyolysis in rats
Cheng-Cheng LI ; Yang LIU ; Han-Ding MAO ; Li-Na ZHAO ; Shu-Yuan LIU ; Yi SHAN
Medical Journal of Chinese People's Liberation Army 2024;49(8):922-929
Objective To explore whether dexmedetomidine(DEX)can alleviate exertional heatstroke(EHS)-induced rhabdomyolysis(RM)in rats by activating adrenergic α2 receptors,and to explore its potential mechanism based on the reactive oxygen species(ROS)/NOD-like receptor protein 3(NLRP3)/interleukin-1β(IL-1β)pathway.Methods Thirty-six male Sprague-Dawley(SD)rats,after a 7-day acclimatization training,were randomly divided into six groups:control group(CN group),EHS group,low-dose DEX group(EHS+low DEX group),high-dose DEX group(EHS+high DEX group),DEX combined with yohimbine(YOH)group(EHS+high DEX+YOH group),and YOH group(EHS+YOH),with six rats in each group.Before modeling,EHS+high DEX+YOH group and EHS+YOH group were intraperitoneally injected with YOH at 1 mg/kg,while the other four groups were injected intraperitoneally with an equal dose of physiological saline(0.9%NS).During modeling,except for CN group,the other 5 groups of rats were subjected to heat exercise in a high-temperature and high-humidity chamber to construct an EHS rat model.After successful modeling,EHS+low DEX group was intraperitoneally injected with DEX at 10 μg/kg,EHS+high DEX group and EHS+high DEX+YOH group were intraperitoneally injected with DEX at 30 μg/kg,and CN group,EHS group and DEX+YOH group were intraperitoneally injected with equal doses of saline.After 6 h of observation,all rats were anesthetized,and their blood from the abdominal aorta and gastrocnemius muscle tissue were taken.Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay(ELISA)was used to detect the expression levels of serum tumor necrosis factor-α(TNF-α),interleukin-6(IL-6),IL-1β and myoglobin(MB)in rats;biochemical assay kit was used to measure the level of creatine kinase(CK)in rat serum;HE staining was used to observe pathological changes in rat gastrocnemius muscle tissues;transmission electron microscopy was used to observe ultrastructural changes in gastrocnemius muscle;2′,7′-dichlorofluorescent yellow diacetate(DCFH-DA)fluorescent probe was used to detect the level of reactive oxygen species(ROS);and Western blotting was performed to detect the expression levels of NOD-like receptors 3(NLRP3),aspartic protease-1(caspase-1)and adrenergic α2A receptor(ADRA2A).Results Compared with CN group,the levels of serum IL-6,IL-1β,TNF-α,CK and MB in EHS group rats were significantly elevated(P<0.01).HE staining results revealed that the gastrocnemius muscle tissues of rats in EHS group had these pathological manifestations such as disarray of muscle fibrous structure,hemorrhage,edema,and infiltration of inflammatory cells.Transmission electron microscopy results showed that the ultrastructure of the gastrocnemius muscle in EHS group exhibited myofibroblasts with swelling and enlarging in size,cytoplasmic vacuolization,and mitochondria with obvious swelling,degranulation,and disappearance of double cristae.Compared with CN group,the expression levels of ROS,NLRP3,and caspase-1 in gastrocnemius of rats in EHS group significantly increased(P<0.01);Compared with EHS group,the levels of TNF-α,IL-6,IL-1β,CK,MB and the expression levels of ROS,NLRP3,caspase-1 in gastrocnemius tissue of rats in EHS+low DEX group and EHS+high DEX group decreased in a dose-dependent manner(P<0.05),and the pathological damage observed with HE staining and transmission electron microscopy was alleviated by DEX.After YOH pretreatment,compared with the EHS+high DEX group,the serum levels of TNF-α,IL-6,IL-1β,CK,MB and ROS,NLRP3 and caspase-1 in the gastrocnemius muscle tissue of rats in EHS+high DEX+YOH group relatively increased(P<0.05),and the pathological damage observed with HE staining and transmission electron microscopy was exacerbated.The expression of ADRA2A in gastrocnemius muscle of EHS group significantly decreased compared with CN group(P<0.01),and the expression of ADRA2A in muscle of rats in DES+low DEX group and EHS+high DEX group was higher than that in EHS group(P<0.05).Conclusions DEX can alleviate EHS-induced RM by activating ADRA2A,potentially through inhibiting the ROS-dependent NLRP3/IL-1β inflammatory pathway.
4.Analysis of the efficacy of adjusting the dose of imatinib with therapeutic drug monitoring in adjuvant treatment after complete resection of gastrointestinal stromal tumors
Zhiliang CHEN ; Hongkun TIAN ; Jianing DING ; Zhiying LI ; Gan MAO ; Yuqiang DU ; Qian SHEN ; Hong ZHOU ; Yong HAN ; Xiangyu ZENG ; Kaixiong TAO ; Peng ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(11):1148-1154
Objective:To explore the efficacy of adjusting the dose of imatinib dose in the context of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in patients with gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) who are receiving adjuvant therapy after complete resection of their tumors.Methods:This was a descriptive study. Inclusion criteria were (1) complete surgical resection with a pathological diagnosis of GIST, (2) postoperative adjuvant therapy with imatinib and dosage adjustment, (3) multiple TDM of imatinib, and (4) complete clinical, pathological, and follow-up data. The data of 70 patients with GISTs treated at Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology between January 2015 and December 2023 were collected retrospectively. The study cohort comprised 15 (21.4%) men and 55 (78.6%) women of median age 60 years (range: 25–82). Of the eligible patients, 49 (70.0%) were at high-risk, 14 (20.0%) at intermediate-risk, six (8.6%) at low-risk, and one (1.4%) at very low risk. Patients were followed up by the gastrointestinal stromal tumor clinic every 2–3 months and their plasma concentrations of imatinib were checked. The dose was adjusted to 300 mg/d or 200 mg/d depending on whether they had had ≥ grade III adverse reactions, and whether the first plasma concentration of imatinib was ≥ 1,500 μg/L or between the expected range of 760 μg/L–1,100 μg/L. Studied indicators included adverse reactions, quality of life before and after dose adjustment, and overall survival and recurrence-free survival (RFS) after dose adjustment.Results:Before dose adjustment, all 70 patients received 400 mg of imatinib daily, with initial TDM values of 1,900 ± 568 μg/L, for a median duration of 8.3 months. After dose adjustment, 60 patients received 300 mg daily, with a TDM of 1,216 ± 350 μg/L, whereas 10 received 200 mg daily, with a TDM of 1,023 ± 269 μg/L. The median duration of treatment after dose adjustment was 23.4 months. Compared with those whose dosages were not adjusted, the incidence of bone marrow suppression was significantly lower (74.3% [52/70] vs. 51.4% [36/70], χ 2=9.202, P=0.010); as were the incidences of edema (95.7% [67/70] vs. 50.0% [35/70], χ 2=40.526, P<0.001); skin reactions (70.0% [49/70] vs. 32.9% [23/70), χ 2=22.495, P<0.001); and gastrointestinal reactions (38.6% [27/70] vs. 10.0% [7/70], χ 2=15.899, P<0.001) in those whose dosages were adjusted. The average total scores for physical health before and after dose adjustment were 76 ± 5 and 88 ± 4, respectively; whereas the mental health scores were 75 ± 6 and 89 ± 4, respectively. The median follow-up period was 36 months (range 6–126). During the first 3 years of follow-up, five high-risk patients with non-gastric GISTs developed recurrences. The 3-year overall survival rate was 100%, and the 3-year RFS rate was 92.8%, high-risk patients having a 3-year RFS rate of 89.8%. Conclusion:The adverse reactions and quality of life of GIST patients with severe adverse reactions to adjuvant imatinib therapy after complete resection can be mitigated by appropriately reducing the dosage of imatinib under the guidance of TDM.
5.Advances in mechanism of traditional Chinese medicine in inhibiting angiogenesis in ovarian cancer.
Mao-Yan TANG ; Dan-Ni DING ; Ya-Ya XIE ; Fang SHEN ; Jia LI ; Fang-Yuan LIU ; Feng-Juan HAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(24):6572-6581
Ovarian cancer is one of the three major cancers in gynecology. Ovarian cancer has insidious symptoms in its early stages and mostly has progressed to advanced stages when detected. Surgical treatment combined with chemotherapy is currently the main treatment, but the 5-year survival rate is still less than 45%. Angiogenesis is a key step in the growth and metastasis of ovarian cancer. The inhibition of ovarian cancer angiogenesis has become a new hotspot in anti-tumor targeted therapy, which has many advantages such as less drug resistance, high specificity, few side effects, and broad anti-tumor spectrum. Modern research has confirmed that traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) can inhibit tumor angiogenesis by inhibiting the expression of pro-angiogenic factors, up-regulating the expression of anti-angiogenic factors, inhibiting the proliferation of vascular endothelial cells, reducing the density of tumor microvessels, and regulating related signaling pathways, with unique advantages in the treatment of ovarian cancer. This paper presented a review of the role of TCM in inhibiting ovarian cancer angiogenesis in order to provide references for the optimization of clinical ovarian cancer treatment strategies.
Humans
;
Female
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A/metabolism*
;
Endothelial Cells/metabolism*
;
Angiogenesis
;
Angiogenesis Inhibitors/therapeutic use*
;
Ovarian Neoplasms/genetics*
;
Neovascularization, Pathologic/genetics*
6.Adjuvant chemotherapy versus adjuvant concurrent chemoradiotherapy after radical surgery for early-stage cervical cancer: a randomized, non-inferiority, multicenter trial.
Danhui WENG ; Huihua XIONG ; Changkun ZHU ; Xiaoyun WAN ; Yaxia CHEN ; Xinyu WANG ; Youzhong ZHANG ; Jie JIANG ; Xi ZHANG ; Qinglei GAO ; Gang CHEN ; Hui XING ; Changyu WANG ; Kezhen LI ; Yaheng CHEN ; Yuyan MAO ; Dongxiao HU ; Zimin PAN ; Qingqin CHEN ; Baoxia CUI ; Kun SONG ; Cunjian YI ; Guangcai PENG ; Xiaobing HAN ; Ruifang AN ; Liangsheng FAN ; Wei WANG ; Tingchuan XIONG ; Yile CHEN ; Zhenzi TANG ; Lin LI ; Xingsheng YANG ; Xiaodong CHENG ; Weiguo LU ; Hui WANG ; Beihua KONG ; Xing XIE ; Ding MA
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(1):93-104
We conducted a prospective study to assess the non-inferiority of adjuvant chemotherapy alone versus adjuvant concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) as an alternative strategy for patients with early-stage (FIGO 2009 stage IB-IIA) cervical cancer having risk factors after surgery. The condition was assessed in terms of prognosis, adverse effects, and quality of life. This randomized trial involved nine centers across China. Eligible patients were randomized to receive adjuvant chemotherapy or CCRT after surgery. The primary end-point was progression-free survival (PFS). From December 2012 to December 2014, 337 patients were subjected to randomization. Final analysis included 329 patients, including 165 in the adjuvant chemotherapy group and 164 in the adjuvant CCRT group. The median follow-up was 72.1 months. The three-year PFS rates were both 91.9%, and the five-year OS was 90.6% versus 90.0% in adjuvant chemotherapy and CCRT groups, respectively. No significant differences were observed in the PFS or OS between groups. The adjusted HR for PFS was 0.854 (95% confidence interval 0.415-1.757; P = 0.667) favoring adjuvant chemotherapy, excluding the predefined non-inferiority boundary of 1.9. The chemotherapy group showed a tendency toward good quality of life. In comparison with post-operative adjuvant CCRT, adjuvant chemotherapy treatment showed non-inferior efficacy in patients with early-stage cervical cancer having pathological risk factors. Adjuvant chemotherapy alone is a favorable alternative post-operative treatment.
Female
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Humans
;
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/drug therapy*
;
Prospective Studies
;
Quality of Life
;
Neoplasm Staging
;
Chemoradiotherapy
;
Chemotherapy, Adjuvant/adverse effects*
;
Adjuvants, Immunologic
;
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use*
;
Retrospective Studies
7.Imageology study of correlation loss and its related factors after short-segment pedicle screw reduction and fixation for lumbar fractures.
Mao-Sheng ZHOU ; Min YANG ; Guo-Zheng DING ; Lin WANG ; Jia-Bing XIE ; Han-Li LU
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2021;34(7):654-658
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze the correction loss after posterior segmental fixation for lumbar spine fractures and explore the related image factors.
METHODS:
Posterior short-segment fixation was received in 48 patients with L
RESULTS:
The average follow-up was 12 to 18 (16.13±5.39) months. LKA, AVH and VWA at 1 week postoperative and those at the final follow up, were significantly improved compared with those preoperative (
CONCLUSION
The angle of adjacent intervertebral discs and anterior height of injured vertebrae were lost statistically after posterior short-segment pedicle screw treatment for lumbar fractures, and multivariate analysis showed that all of them were correlated with load-sharing score.
Female
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Fracture Fixation, Internal
;
Humans
;
Lumbar Vertebrae/surgery*
;
Male
;
Pedicle Screws
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Spinal Fractures/surgery*
;
Thoracic Vertebrae/surgery*
;
Treatment Outcome
8.Peripheral zone PSA density: a predominant variable to improve prostate cancer detection efficiency in men with PSA higher than 4 ng ml
Cheng WANG ; Yue-Yang WANG ; Shi-Yuan WANG ; Ji-Xiang DING ; Mao DING ; Yuan RUAN ; Xiao-Hai WANG ; Yi-Feng JING ; Bang-Min HAN ; Shu-Jie XIA ; Chen-Yi JIANG ; Fu-Jun ZHAO
Asian Journal of Andrology 2021;23(4):415-420
To improve the diagnostic efficiency of prostate cancer (PCa) and reduce unnecessary biopsies, we defined and analyzed the diagnostic efficiency of peripheral zone prostate-specific antigen (PSA) density (PZ-PSAD). Patients who underwent systematic 12-core prostate biopsies in Shanghai General Hospital (Shanghai, China) between January 2012 and January 2018 were retrospectively identified (n = 529). Another group of patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (n = 100) were randomly preselected to obtain the PSA density of the non-PCa cohort (N-PSAD). Prostate volumes and transition zone volumes were measured using multiparameter magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) and were combined with PSA and N-PSAD to obtain the PZ-PSAD from a specific algorithm. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was used to assess the PCa detection efficiency in patients stratified by PSA level, and the area under the ROC curve (AUC) of PZ-PSAD was higher than that of PSA, PSA density (PSAD), and transition zone PSA density (TZ-PSAD). PZ-PSAD could amend the diagnosis for more than half of the patients with inaccurate transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS) and mpMRI results. When TRUS and mpMRI findings were ambiguous to predict PCa (PIRADS score ≤3), PZ-PSAD could increase the positive rate of biopsy from 21.7% to 54.7%, and help 63.8% (150/235) of patients avoid unnecessary prostate biopsy. In patients whose PSA was 4.0-10.0 ng ml
9.Research progress of Phyllanthi Fructus and prediction of its Q-markers.
Hao-Zhou HUANG ; Jing-Cai CHEN ; Ding-Kun ZHANG ; Meng-Qi LI ; Qin-Chi XIAN ; San-Hu FAN ; Peng TAN ; Wan-Min MAO ; Feng LIN ; Jun-Zhi LIN ; Li HAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2021;46(21):5533-5544
Phyllanthi Fructus, a unique Chinese and Tibetan medicinal plant with both edible and medical values, has high potential of cultivation and development. The resources of Phyllanthi Fructus in China are rich, mainly distributed in Yunnan, Sichuan, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, etc. Phyllanthi Fructus is widely used in the clinical practice of Chinese medicine and plays an important role in Tibetan medicine, Uyghur medicine, Yi medicine, and Mongolian medicine. Phyllanthi Fructus mainly contains phenolic acids,tannins, terpenes, sterols, fatty acids, flavonoids, amino acids and other compounds. Modern pharmacological studies show that Phyllanthi Fructus has antioxidant, anticancer, blood lipid-lowering, liver protective, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and immune regulatory activities. In this paper, the research status of Phyllanthi Fructus was reviewed from the aspects of herbal textual research,chemical composition, and pharmacological action. The quality markers(Q-markers) of Phyllanthi Fructus were predicted and analyzed from the aspects of biogenic pathway, specificity and measurability of chemical components, efficacy, properties, new clinical uses, drug-food homology, and transformation of polyphenols. The results will provide a scientific basis for the quality control, quality evaluation, and standard formulation of Phyllanthi Fructus.
China
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
;
Fruit
;
Medicine, Tibetan Traditional
;
Quality Control
10.Prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder in China: A Nationwide Multi-center Population-based Study Among Children Aged 6 to 12 Years.
Hao ZHOU ; Xiu XU ; Weili YAN ; Xiaobing ZOU ; Lijie WU ; Xuerong LUO ; Tingyu LI ; Yi HUANG ; Hongyan GUAN ; Xiang CHEN ; Meng MAO ; Kun XIA ; Lan ZHANG ; Erzhen LI ; Xiaoling GE ; Lili ZHANG ; Chunpei LI ; Xudong ZHANG ; Yuanfeng ZHOU ; Ding DING ; Andy SHIH ; Eric FOMBONNE ; Yi ZHENG ; Jisheng HAN ; Zhongsheng SUN ; Yong-Hui JIANG ; Yi WANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2020;36(9):961-971
This study aimed to obtain the first national estimate of the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in Chinese children. We targeted the population of 6 to 12-year-old children for this prevalence study by multistage convenient cluster sampling. The Modified Chinese Autism Spectrum Rating Scale was used for the screening process. Of the target population of 142,086 children, 88.5% (n = 125,806) participated in the study. A total of 363 children were confirmed as having ASD. The observed ASD prevalence rate was 0.29% (95% CI: 0.26%-0.32%) for the overall population. After adjustment for response rates, the estimated number of ASD cases was 867 in the target population sample, thereby achieving an estimated prevalence of 0.70% (95% CI: 0.64%-0.74%). The prevalence was significantly higher in boys than in girls (0.95%; 95% CI: 0.87%-1.02% versus 0.30%; 95% CI: 0.26%-0.34%; P < 0.001). Of the 363 confirmed ASD cases, 43.3% were newly diagnosed, and most of those (90.4%) were attending regular schools, and 68.8% of the children with ASD had at least one neuropsychiatric comorbidity. Our findings provide reliable data on the estimated ASD prevalence and comorbidities in Chinese children.

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