1.Decreased FEF 50 as an indicator of comorbid asthma and persistent airflow limitation in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps: A cross-sectional study.
Xuechen WANG ; Fangyuan LI ; Chengshuo WANG ; Kai HUANG ; Shen SHEN ; Ming WANG ; Jianmin JIN ; Luo ZHANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2024;137(3):353-355
2.Current status of palliative care for patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer in China: a questionnaire-based survey
Feng WANG ; Dongliang CHEN ; Zixian WANG ; Ye HE ; Jin LI ; Suzhan ZHANG ; Gong CHEN ; Jianmin XU ; Xianglin YUAN ; Yanqiao ZHANG ; Ruihua XU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(7):718-725
Objective:To analyze the current adoption of palliative care by patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) in China.Methods:From 1 March 2023 to 30 June 2023, a questionnaire survey was conducted by random sampling. An exclusive research platform for the Blue Book on Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer. An online questionnaire was sent to medical oncologists (including chief physicians, associate chief physicians, attending physicians and residents) in general hospitals and oncology hospitals in four major regions of East, Central, South and Northeast China. The questionnaire contained 28 questions requesting basic information about doctors, the number of patients with mCRC, the status of treatment from first to fourth line and beyond, points concerning treatment of pain in patients with mCRC, and expectations for the future. A medical team was responsible for the quality control of data collected, whereas statisticians performed the data cleaning and sorting and statistical analysis.Results:A total of 300 clinical questionnaires were collected, including 217 (72%) from doctors in general hospitals and 83 (28%) from doctors in oncology hospitals. Senior physicians (including associate chief physicians and chief physicians) accounted for 65% of the respondents, attending physicians 30%, and residents 5%. Within 3 months (average for each month), 46.4±26.6% patients were diagnosed with recurrent or unresectable mCRC by each physician, 51.6±26.8% of the patients being in cancer hospitals and 44.4±26.3% in general hospitals. One hundred percent of patients receiving first-line treatment received palliative care, as did 80.3% of those receiving second-line treatment, 58.2% of those receiving third-line treatment, and 35.1% of those receiving ≥fourth-line treatment. The primary factor governing selection of first-line treatment was guideline recommendations, whereas comorbidities and the patients' physical status dictated second line to fourth line treatment. Standard first-line treatment was administered to 93.8% of eligible patients, standard second-line treatment to 94.3%; and standard third-line treatment to 73.5%. First-line therapy included targeted therapy in 63.6% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.8%; second-line therapy included targeted therapy in 63.0% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.0%; third-line therapy included targeted therapy in 59.2% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.2%; and fourth-line therapy included targeted therapy in 48.7% of patients and immunotherapy in 3.1%. First-line treatment lasted an average of 9.6 months, second-line treatment 6.7 months, third-line treatment 4.9 months, and fourth-line treatment 3.7 months. More than 70% of the patients maintained a good quality of life after receiving first and second-line treatment and more than 60% of them had ECOG performance scores of 0–1. After receiving third- and fourth-line treatment, 50%–60% of patients maintained a good quality of life and 40%–50% of them maintained ECOG performance scores of 0–1. The survey also revealed that the main deficiencies in treatment were limited effectiveness of third-line treatment, insufficient availability and opportunity for clinical research, popularity of new drugs or new drug combination strategies, and limited channels for participation in multidisciplinary diagnosis and treatment. Clinicians reported looking forward to participating in more clinical research on new drugs, hearing about the experience of experts in the field, and discovery of new targets and new drugs that increased the options for posterior line treatment of colorectal cancer.Conclusions:This report objectively summarizes the current situation, treatment difficulties, and expectations of frontline physicians concerning management of mCRC, thus providing a basis for decision-making and future direction for the diagnosis and research on treatment of mCRC.
3.Current status of palliative care for patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer in China: a questionnaire-based survey
Feng WANG ; Dongliang CHEN ; Zixian WANG ; Ye HE ; Jin LI ; Suzhan ZHANG ; Gong CHEN ; Jianmin XU ; Xianglin YUAN ; Yanqiao ZHANG ; Ruihua XU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(7):718-725
Objective:To analyze the current adoption of palliative care by patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) in China.Methods:From 1 March 2023 to 30 June 2023, a questionnaire survey was conducted by random sampling. An exclusive research platform for the Blue Book on Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer. An online questionnaire was sent to medical oncologists (including chief physicians, associate chief physicians, attending physicians and residents) in general hospitals and oncology hospitals in four major regions of East, Central, South and Northeast China. The questionnaire contained 28 questions requesting basic information about doctors, the number of patients with mCRC, the status of treatment from first to fourth line and beyond, points concerning treatment of pain in patients with mCRC, and expectations for the future. A medical team was responsible for the quality control of data collected, whereas statisticians performed the data cleaning and sorting and statistical analysis.Results:A total of 300 clinical questionnaires were collected, including 217 (72%) from doctors in general hospitals and 83 (28%) from doctors in oncology hospitals. Senior physicians (including associate chief physicians and chief physicians) accounted for 65% of the respondents, attending physicians 30%, and residents 5%. Within 3 months (average for each month), 46.4±26.6% patients were diagnosed with recurrent or unresectable mCRC by each physician, 51.6±26.8% of the patients being in cancer hospitals and 44.4±26.3% in general hospitals. One hundred percent of patients receiving first-line treatment received palliative care, as did 80.3% of those receiving second-line treatment, 58.2% of those receiving third-line treatment, and 35.1% of those receiving ≥fourth-line treatment. The primary factor governing selection of first-line treatment was guideline recommendations, whereas comorbidities and the patients' physical status dictated second line to fourth line treatment. Standard first-line treatment was administered to 93.8% of eligible patients, standard second-line treatment to 94.3%; and standard third-line treatment to 73.5%. First-line therapy included targeted therapy in 63.6% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.8%; second-line therapy included targeted therapy in 63.0% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.0%; third-line therapy included targeted therapy in 59.2% of patients and immunotherapy in 2.2%; and fourth-line therapy included targeted therapy in 48.7% of patients and immunotherapy in 3.1%. First-line treatment lasted an average of 9.6 months, second-line treatment 6.7 months, third-line treatment 4.9 months, and fourth-line treatment 3.7 months. More than 70% of the patients maintained a good quality of life after receiving first and second-line treatment and more than 60% of them had ECOG performance scores of 0–1. After receiving third- and fourth-line treatment, 50%–60% of patients maintained a good quality of life and 40%–50% of them maintained ECOG performance scores of 0–1. The survey also revealed that the main deficiencies in treatment were limited effectiveness of third-line treatment, insufficient availability and opportunity for clinical research, popularity of new drugs or new drug combination strategies, and limited channels for participation in multidisciplinary diagnosis and treatment. Clinicians reported looking forward to participating in more clinical research on new drugs, hearing about the experience of experts in the field, and discovery of new targets and new drugs that increased the options for posterior line treatment of colorectal cancer.Conclusions:This report objectively summarizes the current situation, treatment difficulties, and expectations of frontline physicians concerning management of mCRC, thus providing a basis for decision-making and future direction for the diagnosis and research on treatment of mCRC.
4.Pathological Networks Involving Dysmorphic Neurons in Type II Focal Cortical Dysplasia.
Yijie SHAO ; Qianqian GE ; Jiachao YANG ; Mi WANG ; Yu ZHOU ; Jin-Xin GUO ; Mengyue ZHU ; Jiachen SHI ; Yiqi HU ; Li SHEN ; Zhong CHEN ; Xiao-Ming LI ; Jun-Ming ZHU ; Jianmin ZHANG ; Shumin DUAN ; Jiadong CHEN
Neuroscience Bulletin 2022;38(9):1007-1024
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is one of the most common causes of drug-resistant epilepsy. Dysmorphic neurons are the major histopathological feature of type II FCD, but their role in seizure genesis in FCD is unclear. Here we performed whole-cell patch-clamp recording and morphological reconstruction of cortical principal neurons in postsurgical brain tissue from drug-resistant epilepsy patients. Quantitative analyses revealed distinct morphological and electrophysiological characteristics of the upper layer dysmorphic neurons in type II FCD, including an enlarged soma, aberrant dendritic arbors, increased current injection for rheobase action potential firing, and reduced action potential firing frequency. Intriguingly, the upper layer dysmorphic neurons received decreased glutamatergic and increased GABAergic synaptic inputs that were coupled with upregulation of the Na+-K+-Cl- cotransporter. In addition, we found a depolarizing shift of the GABA reversal potential in the CamKII-cre::PTENflox/flox mouse model of drug-resistant epilepsy, suggesting that enhanced GABAergic inputs might depolarize dysmorphic neurons. Thus, imbalance of synaptic excitation and inhibition of dysmorphic neurons may contribute to seizure genesis in type II FCD.
Animals
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Drug Resistant Epilepsy/surgery*
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Epilepsy/pathology*
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Malformations of Cortical Development/pathology*
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Malformations of Cortical Development, Group I
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Mice
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Neurons/pathology*
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Seizures/pathology*
5.Study on the etiological characteristics and prevention and control of adult community-acquired pneumonia in hospitalized patients in a hospital in Beijing from 2015 to 2019
Mei WANG ; Jianyu ZHAO ; Xue LI ; Liyuan WU ; Qianqian ZHOU ; Yanfei HUANG ; Wenjun SUI ; Shaoya ZHANG ; Jie XU ; Jianmin JIN ; Haitong GU ; Xinxin LU
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2021;55(12):1410-1418
Objective:To explore the distribution characteristics of pathogens in adult patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and to provide basis for the diagnosis, treatment, prevention of CAP.Methods:1 446 inpatients with CAP were prospectively enrolled in a third-class hospital in Beijing in recent 5 years (from January 2015 to December 2019). Respiratory tract samples were collected for smear, culture, nucleic acid, antigen and antibody detection to identify the pathogen of CAP. Mann-Whitney U test was used for continuous variables and χ 2 test or Fisher′s exact test was used for categorical data for statistical analysis. Results:Among the 1 446 patients, 822 (56.85%) patients were infected with a single pathogen, 231 (15.98%) patients were infected with multiple pathogens, and 393 (27.18%) patients were not clear about the pathogen. Influenza virus is the first pathogen of CAP (20.95%, 303/1 446), mainly H1N1 (8.51%, 123/1 446), followed by mycoplasma pneumoniae (7.19%, 104/1 446), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (5.33%, 77/1 446) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (5.05%, 73/1 446). The outbreak of H1N1 occurred from December 2018 to February 2019, and the epidemic of mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia was monitored from August to November 2019. Patients under 65 years old had high detection rates of Mycoplasma pneumoniae (14.41% vs. 2.41%, χ2=74.712, P<0.001), Streptococcus pneumoniae (8.16% vs. 2.99%, χ2=18.156, P<0.001), rhinovirus (6.08% vs. 3.56%, χ2=5.025, P<0.025), Chlamydia pneumoniae (5.90% vs. 1.15%, χ2=26.542, P<0.001) and adenovirus (3.13% vs. 0.92%, χ2=9.547, P=0.002). The severe disease rate of CAP was 14.66% (212/1 446), and the average mortality rate was 3.66% (53/1 446). The severe illness rate and mortality rate of bacterial-viral co-infection were 28.97% (31/107) and 19.63% (21/107), respectively. Conclusions:Influenza virus is the primary pathogen of adult CAP. Outbreaks of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and H1N1 were detected in 2018 and 2019, respectively. The remission rate and mortality rate of virus-bacteria co-infection were significantly higher than those of single pathogen infection. Accurate etiological basis not only plays a role in clinical diagnosis and treatment, but also provides important data support for prevention and early warning.
6.Study on the etiological characteristics and prevention and control of adult community-acquired pneumonia in hospitalized patients in a hospital in Beijing from 2015 to 2019
Mei WANG ; Jianyu ZHAO ; Xue LI ; Liyuan WU ; Qianqian ZHOU ; Yanfei HUANG ; Wenjun SUI ; Shaoya ZHANG ; Jie XU ; Jianmin JIN ; Haitong GU ; Xinxin LU
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2021;55(12):1410-1418
Objective:To explore the distribution characteristics of pathogens in adult patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and to provide basis for the diagnosis, treatment, prevention of CAP.Methods:1 446 inpatients with CAP were prospectively enrolled in a third-class hospital in Beijing in recent 5 years (from January 2015 to December 2019). Respiratory tract samples were collected for smear, culture, nucleic acid, antigen and antibody detection to identify the pathogen of CAP. Mann-Whitney U test was used for continuous variables and χ 2 test or Fisher′s exact test was used for categorical data for statistical analysis. Results:Among the 1 446 patients, 822 (56.85%) patients were infected with a single pathogen, 231 (15.98%) patients were infected with multiple pathogens, and 393 (27.18%) patients were not clear about the pathogen. Influenza virus is the first pathogen of CAP (20.95%, 303/1 446), mainly H1N1 (8.51%, 123/1 446), followed by mycoplasma pneumoniae (7.19%, 104/1 446), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (5.33%, 77/1 446) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (5.05%, 73/1 446). The outbreak of H1N1 occurred from December 2018 to February 2019, and the epidemic of mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia was monitored from August to November 2019. Patients under 65 years old had high detection rates of Mycoplasma pneumoniae (14.41% vs. 2.41%, χ2=74.712, P<0.001), Streptococcus pneumoniae (8.16% vs. 2.99%, χ2=18.156, P<0.001), rhinovirus (6.08% vs. 3.56%, χ2=5.025, P<0.025), Chlamydia pneumoniae (5.90% vs. 1.15%, χ2=26.542, P<0.001) and adenovirus (3.13% vs. 0.92%, χ2=9.547, P=0.002). The severe disease rate of CAP was 14.66% (212/1 446), and the average mortality rate was 3.66% (53/1 446). The severe illness rate and mortality rate of bacterial-viral co-infection were 28.97% (31/107) and 19.63% (21/107), respectively. Conclusions:Influenza virus is the primary pathogen of adult CAP. Outbreaks of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and H1N1 were detected in 2018 and 2019, respectively. The remission rate and mortality rate of virus-bacteria co-infection were significantly higher than those of single pathogen infection. Accurate etiological basis not only plays a role in clinical diagnosis and treatment, but also provides important data support for prevention and early warning.
7.Analysis of clinical features of 58 patients with severe or critical 2019 novel coronavirus pneumonia
Peng BAI ; Wei HE ; Xichun ZHANG ; Xiaofang LIU ; Shi LIU ; Jianmin JIN
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2020;29(4):483-487
Objective:To analyze the clinical features of severe or critical 2019 novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP) patients.Methods:Clinical data of 58 patients with severe or critical NCP in Wuhan Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology from January 29 to February 26, 2020 were collected. The general information, clinical symptoms, results of blood test and chest computed tomography (CT) imagings, treatments and outcomes of patients were analyzed retrospectively.Results:Among the 58 patients, 36 patients (62.1%) were severe and 22 (37.9%) were critical, 28 (48.3%) were male and 30 (51.7%) female, with an average age of (62.12±12.95) years. Twenty-eight patients (48.2%) had previous underlying diseases, including 21 patients (36.2%) with hypertension, 11 patients (19.0%) with diabetes mellitus, 6 patietns (10.3%) with coronary heart disease, 2 patients (3.4%) with chronic renal failure, and 1 patient (1.7%) with malignant tumor. The symptoms included fever (54 cases, 93.1%), dyspnea (48 cases, 82.8%), cough (46 cases, 79.3%), muscle soreness (32 cases, 55.2%), sore throat (15 cases, 25.9%), and diarrhea (6 cases, 10.3%). Decreased or increased white blood cell count was found in 7 patients (12.1%) and 6 patietns (10.3%). Decreased percent of lymphocyte, increased percent of neutrophil, and decreased hemoglobin level were found in 35 patients (60.3%), 27 patients (46.6%), and 24 patients (41.4%), respectively. Elevated CRP, PCT and D-dimmer level were demonstrated in 38 patients (65.5%), 36 patients (62.1%), and 45 patients (77.5%). Increased level of ALT, AST, LDH and decreased serum albumin were found in 32 patients (55.2%), 25 patients (43.1%), 39 patietns (67.2%) and 43 patietns (74.1%), respectively. The main features of CT imaging were diffuse lesion in both lungs, which were mainly manifested as multiple patchy shadows and ground-glass shadows, bilateral and peripheral distribution, consolidation and interlobular septal thickening. Twenty-nine patients (50.0%) were treated with antibiotics, and 14 patients (24.1%) with systemic glucocorticoid. In addition to supportive and antivirus treatment, oxygen therapy methods including nasal catheter (9 cases, 15.5%), oxygen mask (33 cases, 56.9%), high-flow nasal catheter (8 cases, 13.3%) and invasive mechanical ventilation were adopted. Twenty-one patients (36.2%) were discharged from the hospital, 27 patients (46.6%) in remission were still in the isolation wards, 3 patients (5.2%) were transferred to the ICU for further treatment, and 7 patients (12.1%) died.Conclusions:Severe and critical NCP are at higher risk in the elderly and those having underlying diseases. Severe/critical NCP patients often show extrapulmonary abnormity as well as lung dysfunction. Comprehensive treatment as early as possible is the key to improve the prognosis and reduce the mortality.
8. Management of internal hernia after radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer
Wangxun JIN ; Bing WANG ; Yunli ZHANG ; Xinbao WANG ; Jianmin GUO ; Jiantao YANG ; Lingnan ZHANG
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners 2019;18(12):1161-1163
A total of 1 789 patients with gastric cancer underwent radical gastrectomy in our hospital from September 2015 to August 2017, internal hernia (IH) developed in 7 cases with a incidence rate of 0.4%. The general condition, the symptoms, imaging findings, treatment methods and prognosis as well as the types of digestive tract reconstruction of patients were retrospective analyzed. There were 4 cases of Petersen′s hernia, 2 cases of jejuno-jejuno mesenteric hernia and 1 case of diaphragm hernia. All patients developed mechanical obstruction. Imaging examination showed mesenteric vessels overriding sign and double whirl sign. Six patients recovered smoothly, 1 patient gave up treatment due to extensive small bowel infarction. It is indicated that the formation of abnormal channels in the abdominal cavity after radical gastrectomy may lead to IH. The mesenteric vessels overriding sign and the double whirl sign are the unique imaging findings of IH after radical gastrectomy. Closing the abnormal channel can prevent the occurrence of IH after gastrectomy.
9.Clinical risk score for invasive fungal diseases in patients with hematological malignancies undergoing chemotherapy: China Assessment of Antifungal Therapy in Hematological Diseases (CAESAR) study.
Ling WANG ; Ying WANG ; Jiong HU ; Yuqian SUN ; He HUANG ; Jing CHEN ; Jianyong LI ; Jun MA ; Juan LI ; Yingmin LIANG ; Jianmin WANG ; Yan LI ; Kang YU ; Jianda HU ; Jie JIN ; Chun WANG ; Depei WU ; Yang XIAO ; Xiaojun HUANG
Frontiers of Medicine 2019;13(3):365-377
Invasive fungal disease (IFD) is a major infectious complication in patients with hematological malignancies. In this study, we examined 4889 courses of chemotherapy in patients with hematological diseases to establish a training dataset (n = 3500) by simple random sampling to develop a weighted risk score for proven or probable IFD through multivariate regression, which included the following variables: male patients, induction chemotherapy for newly diagnosed or relapsed disease, neutropenia, neutropenia longer than 10 days, hypoalbuminemia, central-venous catheter, and history of IFD. The patients were classified into three groups, which had low (0-10, ~1.2%), intermediate (11-15, 6.4%), and high risk ( > 15, 17.5%) of IFD. In the validation set (n = 1389), the IFD incidences of the groups were ~1.4%, 5.0%, and 21.4%. In addition, we demonstrated that antifungal prophylaxis offered no benefits in low-risk patients, whereas benefits were documented in intermediate (2.1% vs. 6.6%, P = 0.007) and high-risk patients (8.4% vs. 23.3%, P = 0.007). To make the risk score applicable for clinical settings, a pre-chemo risk score that deleted all unpredictable factors before chemotherapy was established, and it confirmed that anti-fungal prophylaxis was beneficial in patients with intermediate and high risk of IFD. In conclusion, an objective, weighted risk score for IFD was developed, and it may be useful in guiding antifungal prophylaxis.
10.Four-year follow-up of patients with imatinib-resistant or intolerant chronic myeloid leukemia receiving dasatinib: efficacy and safety.
Xiaojun HUANG ; Qian JIANG ; Jianda HU ; Jianyong LI ; Jie JIN ; Fanyi MENG ; Zhixiang SHEN ; Ting LIU ; Depei WU ; Jianmin WANG ; Jianxiang WANG
Frontiers of Medicine 2019;13(3):344-353
Dasatinib is a highly effective second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor used to treat chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). In 2007, a pivotal phase-2 study of dasatinib as second-line treatment was initiated in 140 Chinese CML patients. This report from the 4-year follow-up revealed that 73% of 59 patients in chronic phase (CML-CP) and 32% of 25 patients in accelerated phase (CML-AP) remained under treatment. The initial dosage of dasatinib for CML-CP and CML-AP patients were 100 mg once daily and 70 mg twice daily (total = 140 mg/ day), respectively. The cumulative major cytogenetic response (MCyR) rate among patients with CML-CP was 66.1% (versus 50.8% at 18 months), and the median time to MCyR was 12.7 weeks. All CML-CP patients who achieved MCyR after a 4-year follow-up also achieved a complete cytogenetic response. The cumulative complete hematological response (CHR) rate among patients with CML-AP was 64% (16/25), with three CML-AP patients achieving CHR between 18 months and 4 years of follow-up; the median time to CHR was 16.4 weeks. The adverse event (AE) profile of dasatinib at 4 years was similar to that at 6 and 18 months. The most frequently reported AEs (any grade) included pleural effusion, headache, and myelosuppression. These long-term follow-up data continue to support dasatinib as a second-line treatment for Chinese patients with CML.

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