1.Meta-analysis of the effects of gene polymorphism on plasma concentration of voriconazole in patients with invasive fungal infection
Yaxuan LI ; Xingde LI ; Guohui WANG ; Panpan MAO ; Xuejiao MA ; Cangsang SONG
China Pharmacy 2025;36(2):225-231
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the influence of gene polymorphism on plasma minimum concentration (cmin) of voriconazole (VRZ) in patients with invasive fungal infection. METHODS The Cochrane Library, Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, China Biomedical Literature Database, CNKI, VIP and Wanfang Data were searched for literature on the correlation between gene polymorphisms and cmin of VRZ from inception to April 2024. After screening the literature, extracting data, and evaluating the quality of the literature, meta-analysis was performed using R 4.3.2 software. RESULTS A total of 21 studies with 2 454 patients were included. The results of meta-analysis showed that the VRZ cmin of CYP2C19 IM and PM types was significantly higher than EM type, and the VRZ cmin of IM type was significantly lower than PM type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of CYP2C9 rs1057910 AA type was significantly higher than AC/CC type, and that of CYP3A5 rs776746 CC type was significantly higher than TT type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of POR rs10954732 GG type was significantly higher than GA and AA types, and that of POR rs1057868 CT type was significantly lower than TT type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of ABCB1 rs1045642 CC type was significantly higher than TT type (P<0.05). The VRZ cmin of NR1I2 rs2472677 CT type was significantly higher than TT type, and rs7643645 AA type was significantly higher than AG type (P<0.05). The VRZ cmin of ABCC2 rs717620 CC type was significantly lower than CT type and TT type, and the CT type was significantly lower than TT type (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS Mutant alleles in CYP2C19, CYP2C9 rs1057910, CYP3A5 rs776746, POR rs10954732, ABCB1 rs1045642 and NR1I2 rs7643645 can lead to a decrease in VRZ plasma concentration, and mutant allele in ABCC2 rs717620 can lead to an increase in VRZ plasma concentration.
2.Research progress on the interaction between immunosuppressants and intestinal flora after liver transplantation
Saijuan LU ; Cangsang SONG ; Xingde LI ; Guohui WANG ; Panpan MAO
China Pharmacy 2025;36(3):362-366
Immunosuppressants (including cyclosporine, tacrolimus, mycophenolate esters, glucocorticoids, etc.) are the first choice of drugs to prevent organ rejection after liver transplantation, which can effectively reduce the host immune response to the graft, improve the success rate of transplantation, and prolong the survival of patients. Liver transplantation is associated with intestinal flora, while immunosuppressive agents interact with intestinal flora. Immunosuppressive agents change the abundance, composition and metabolites of intestinal flora, while a series of enzymes and metabolites produced by intestinal flora may chemically alter the absorption and metabolism of immunosuppressants. In addition, the incidence of postoperative infection in liver transplantion patients is relatively high, while gut flora affects inflammatory factors, and immunosuppressants interact with inflammatory factors. To some extent, immunosuppressants can be thought of as acting through intestinal flora in patients after liver transplantation.
3.Meta-analysis of the effects of gene polymorphism on plasma concentration of voriconazole in patients with invasive fungal infection
Yaxuan LI ; Xingde LI ; Guohui WANG ; Panpan MAO ; Xuejiao MA ; Cangsang SONG
China Pharmacy 2025;36(2):225-231
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the influence of gene polymorphism on plasma minimum concentration (cmin) of voriconazole (VRZ) in patients with invasive fungal infection. METHODS The Cochrane Library, Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, China Biomedical Literature Database, CNKI, VIP and Wanfang Data were searched for literature on the correlation between gene polymorphisms and cmin of VRZ from inception to April 2024. After screening the literature, extracting data, and evaluating the quality of the literature, meta-analysis was performed using R 4.3.2 software. RESULTS A total of 21 studies with 2 454 patients were included. The results of meta-analysis showed that the VRZ cmin of CYP2C19 IM and PM types was significantly higher than EM type, and the VRZ cmin of IM type was significantly lower than PM type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of CYP2C9 rs1057910 AA type was significantly higher than AC/CC type, and that of CYP3A5 rs776746 CC type was significantly higher than TT type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of POR rs10954732 GG type was significantly higher than GA and AA types, and that of POR rs1057868 CT type was significantly lower than TT type (P<0.01). The VRZ cmin of ABCB1 rs1045642 CC type was significantly higher than TT type (P<0.05). The VRZ cmin of NR1I2 rs2472677 CT type was significantly higher than TT type, and rs7643645 AA type was significantly higher than AG type (P<0.05). The VRZ cmin of ABCC2 rs717620 CC type was significantly lower than CT type and TT type, and the CT type was significantly lower than TT type (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS Mutant alleles in CYP2C19, CYP2C9 rs1057910, CYP3A5 rs776746, POR rs10954732, ABCB1 rs1045642 and NR1I2 rs7643645 can lead to a decrease in VRZ plasma concentration, and mutant allele in ABCC2 rs717620 can lead to an increase in VRZ plasma concentration.
4.Early assessment of responsive neurostimulation for drug-resistant epilepsy in China: A multicenter, self-controlled study.
Yanfeng YANG ; Penghu WEI ; Jianwei SHI ; Ying MAO ; Jianmin ZHANG ; Ding LEI ; Zhiquan YANG ; Shiwei SONG ; Ruobing QIAN ; Wenling LI ; Yongzhi SHAN ; Guoguang ZHAO
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(4):430-440
BACKGROUND:
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of the first cohort of people in China treated with a responsive neurostimulation system (Epilcure TM , GenLight MedTech, Hangzhou, China) for focal drug-resistant epilepsy in this study.
METHODS:
This multicenter, before-and-after self-controlled study was conducted across 8 centers from March 2022 to June 2023, involving patients with drug-resistant epilepsy who were undergoing responsive neurostimulation (RNS). The study was based on an ongoing multi-center, single-blind, randomized controlled study. Efficacy was assessed through metrics including median seizure count, seizure frequency reduction (SFR), and response rate. Multivariable linear regression analysis was conducted to explore the relationships of basic clinical factors and intracranial electrophysiological characteristics with SFR. The postoperative quality of life, cognitive function, depression, and anxiety were evaluated as well.
RESULTS:
The follow-up period for the 19 participants was 10.7 ± 3.4 months. Seizure counts decreased significantly 6 months after device activation, with median SFR of 48% at the 6th month (M6) and 58% at M12 ( P <0.05). The average response rate after 13 months of treatment was 42%, with 21% ( n = 4) of the participants achieving seizure freedom. Patients who have previously undergone resective surgery appear to achieve better therapeutic outcomes at M11, M12 and M13 ( β <0, P <0.05). No statistically significant differences were observed in patients' scores of quality of life, cognition, depression and anxiety following stimulation when compared to baseline measurements. No serious adverse events related to the devices were observed.
CONCLUSIONS:
The preliminary findings suggest that Epilcure TM exhibits promising therapeutic potential in reducing the frequency of epileptic seizures. However, to further validate its efficacy, larger-scale randomized controlled trials are required.
REGISTRATION
Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (No. ChiCTR2200055247).
Humans
;
Female
;
Male
;
Drug Resistant Epilepsy/therapy*
;
Adult
;
Young Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
China
;
Adolescent
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Quality of Life
;
Single-Blind Method
;
Seizures
;
Electric Stimulation Therapy/methods*
5.Equivalence of SYN008 versus omalizumab in patients with refractory chronic spontaneous urticaria: A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, active-controlled phase III study.
Jingyi LI ; Yunsheng LIANG ; Wenli FENG ; Liehua DENG ; Hong FANG ; Chao JI ; Youkun LIN ; Furen ZHANG ; Rushan XIA ; Chunlei ZHANG ; Shuping GUO ; Mao LIN ; Yanling LI ; Shoumin ZHANG ; Xiaojing KANG ; Liuqing CHEN ; Zhiqiang SONG ; Xu YAO ; Chengxin LI ; Xiuping HAN ; Guoxiang GUO ; Qing GUO ; Xinsuo DUAN ; Jie LI ; Juan SU ; Shanshan LI ; Qing SUN ; Juan TAO ; Yangfeng DING ; Danqi DENG ; Fuqiu LI ; Haiyun SUO ; Shunquan WU ; Jingbo QIU ; Hongmei LUO ; Linfeng LI ; Ruoyu LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(16):2040-2042
6.Expert consensus on orthodontic treatment of protrusive facial deformities.
Jie PAN ; Yun LU ; Anqi LIU ; Xuedong WANG ; Yu WANG ; Shiqiang GONG ; Bing FANG ; Hong HE ; Yuxing BAI ; Lin WANG ; Zuolin JIN ; Weiran LI ; Lili CHEN ; Min HU ; Jinlin SONG ; Yang CAO ; Jun WANG ; Jin FANG ; Jiejun SHI ; Yuxia HOU ; Xudong WANG ; Jing MAO ; Chenchen ZHOU ; Yan LIU ; Yuehua LIU
International Journal of Oral Science 2025;17(1):5-5
Protrusive facial deformities, characterized by the forward displacement of the teeth and/or jaws beyond the normal range, affect a considerable portion of the population. The manifestations and morphological mechanisms of protrusive facial deformities are complex and diverse, requiring orthodontists to possess a high level of theoretical knowledge and practical experience in the relevant orthodontic field. To further optimize the correction of protrusive facial deformities, this consensus proposes that the morphological mechanisms and diagnosis of protrusive facial deformities should be analyzed and judged from multiple dimensions and factors to accurately formulate treatment plans. It emphasizes the use of orthodontic strategies, including jaw growth modification, tooth extraction or non-extraction for anterior teeth retraction, and maxillofacial vertical control. These strategies aim to reduce anterior teeth and lip protrusion, increase chin prominence, harmonize nasolabial and chin-lip relationships, and improve the facial profile of patients with protrusive facial deformities. For severe skeletal protrusive facial deformities, orthodontic-orthognathic combined treatment may be suggested. This consensus summarizes the theoretical knowledge and clinical experience of numerous renowned oral experts nationwide, offering reference strategies for the correction of protrusive facial deformities.
Humans
;
Orthodontics, Corrective/methods*
;
Consensus
;
Malocclusion/therapy*
;
Patient Care Planning
;
Cephalometry
7.Dimethyl fumarate modulates M1/M2 macrophage polarization to ameliorate periodontal destruction by increasing TUFM-mediated mitophagy.
Liang CHEN ; Pengxiao HU ; Xinhua HONG ; Bin LI ; Yifan PING ; ShuoMin CHEN ; Tianle JIANG ; Haofu JIANG ; Yixin MAO ; Yang CHEN ; Zhongchen SONG ; Zhou YE ; Xiaoyu SUN ; Shufan ZHAO ; Shengbin HUANG
International Journal of Oral Science 2025;17(1):32-32
Periodontitis is a common oral disease characterized by progressive alveolar bone resorption and inflammation of the periodontal tissues. Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) has been used in the treatment of various immune-inflammatory diseases due to its excellent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant functions. Here, we investigated for the first time the therapeutic effect of DMF on periodontitis. In vivo studies showed that DMF significantly inhibited periodontal destruction, enhanced mitophagy, and decreased the M1/M2 macrophage ratio. In vitro studies showed that DMF inhibited macrophage polarization toward M1 macrophages and promoted polarization toward M2 macrophages, with improved mitochondrial function, inhibited oxidative stress, and increased mitophagy in RAW 264.7 cells. Furthermore, DMF increased intracellular mitochondrial Tu translation elongation factor (TUFM) levels to maintain mitochondrial homeostasis, promoted mitophagy, and modulated macrophage polarization, whereas TUFM knockdown decreased the protective effect of DMF. Finally, mechanistic studies showed that DMF increased intracellular TUFM levels by protecting TUFM from degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasomal degradation pathway. Our results demonstrate for the first time that DMF protects mitochondrial function and inhibits oxidative stress through TUFM-mediated mitophagy in macrophages, resulting in a shift in the balance of macrophage polarization, thereby attenuating periodontitis. Importantly, this study provides new insights into the prevention of periodontitis.
Dimethyl Fumarate/pharmacology*
;
Mitophagy/drug effects*
;
Animals
;
Mice
;
Macrophages/metabolism*
;
Periodontitis/prevention & control*
;
RAW 264.7 Cells
;
Oxidative Stress/drug effects*
;
Peptide Elongation Factor Tu/metabolism*
;
Mice, Inbred C57BL
;
Male
;
Mitochondria/drug effects*
8.Associations of Genetic Risk and Physical Activity with Incident Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Large Prospective Cohort Study.
Jin YANG ; Xiao Lin WANG ; Wen Fang ZHONG ; Jian GAO ; Huan CHEN ; Pei Liang CHEN ; Qing Mei HUANG ; Yi Xin ZHANG ; Fang Fei YOU ; Chuan LI ; Wei Qi SONG ; Dong SHEN ; Jiao Jiao REN ; Dan LIU ; Zhi Hao LI ; Chen MAO
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2025;38(10):1194-1204
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the relationship between physical activity and genetic risk and their combined effects on the risk of developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
METHODS:
This prospective cohort study included 318,085 biobank participants from the UK. Physical activity was assessed using the short form of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. The participants were stratified into low-, intermediate-, and high-genetic-risk groups based on their polygenic risk scores. Multivariate Cox regression models and multiplicative interaction analyses were used.
RESULTS:
During a median follow-up period of 13 years, 9,209 participants were diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. For low genetic risk, compared to low physical activity, the hazard ratios ( HRs) for moderate and high physical activity were 0.853 (95% confidence interval [ CI]: 0.748-0.972) and 0.831 (95% CI: 0.727-0.950), respectively. For intermediate genetic risk, the HRs were 0.829 (95% CI: 0.758-0.905) and 0.835 (95% CI: 0.764-0.914), respectively. For participants with high genetic risk, the HRs were 0.809 (95% CI: 0.746-0.877) and 0.818 (95% CI: 0.754-0.888), respectively. A significant interaction was observed between genetic risk and physical activity.
CONCLUSION
Moderate or high levels of physical activity were associated with a lower risk of developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease across all genetic risk groups, highlighting the need to tailor activity interventions for genetically susceptible individuals.
Humans
;
Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/epidemiology*
;
Exercise
;
Male
;
Female
;
Middle Aged
;
Prospective Studies
;
Aged
;
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
;
Risk Factors
;
United Kingdom/epidemiology*
;
Incidence
;
Adult
9.Association between sleep and frailty: a Mendelian randomization study
YANG Yudan ; YANG Hong ; LUO Peiyang ; SONG Jie ; SUN Xiaohui ; YE Ding ; MAO Yingying ; LI Jiayu
Journal of Preventive Medicine 2024;36(12):1082-1085,1091
Objective:
To examine the association between sleep and frailty using the bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach, so as to provide the basis for the prevention and intervention of frailty.
Methods:
The data on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) related to sleep duration, insomnia and morning chronotype were collected from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and meta-analysis of GWAS, involving 446 118, 1 331 010 and 697 828 participants, respectively. The frailty was evaluated using the frailty index, and the relevant SNP data were collected from a meta-analysis of GWAS involving 175 226 participants. A bidirectional MR analysis was performed using the inverse-variance weighted method. Sensitivity analyses employed the weighted median method, the maximum likelihood-based method, the MR-Egger regression, and the MR-PRESSO test.
Results:
Forward MR analysis showed that longer sleep duration (β=-0.170, 95%CI: -0.255 to -0.085) and morning chronotype (β=-0.036, 95%CI: -0.058 to -0.014) decreased the risk of frailty, while insomnia increased the risk of frailty (β=0.167, 95%CI: 0.149-0.184). Reverse MR analysis showed that frailty increased the risk of insomnia (OR=1.645, 95%CI: 1.278-2.117). Both bidirectional MR results were robust, which excluded the impact of heterogeneity and horizontal pleiotropy.
Conclusion
Sleep duration, insomnia, and morning chronotype are associated with frailty.
10.Analysis of predictive accuracy and its influential factors of three individualized administration tools for tacroli-mus after kidney transplantation
Guohui WANG ; Xingde LI ; Ya PAN ; Panpan MAO ; Hanshu ZHANG ; Xuejiao MA ; Cangsang SONG
China Pharmacy 2024;35(24):3023-3028
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the accuracy of three individualized drug delivery tools, i.e. JPKD, SmartDose and NextDose, in predicting tacrolimus dose and blood concentration after kidney transplantation, and analyze the influential factors of prediction accuracy. METHODS The clinical data of adult hospitalized patients treated with tacrolimus after kidney transplantation from January 2021 to June 2023 were retrospectively collected. Three individualized dosing tools, i.e. JPKD, SmartDose and NextDose, were used to predict the dose and plasma concentration of tacrolimus. The absolute prediction error (APE) and prediction error (PE) between the measured value and the predicted value, and prediction success rate were calculated (APE<30% indicating a good forecast). Pearson assay or Spearman assay was used to analyze the correlation between the predicted dosage and actual dosage, as well as the predicted and measured blood concentration values using three software; univariate analysis was used to investigate the influential factors for prediction accuracy of JPKD, SmartDose and NextDose. RESULTS A total of 110 hospitalized patients were included in this study, and tacrolimus doses and plasma concentrations were monitored. The predicted doses of JPKD, SmartDose and NextDose were (2.0±0.7), (2.7±1.9), (1.8±0.8) mg, their measured value was (1.9±0.6) mg, and the correlation coefficients between the predicted values and the measured value were 0.841, 0.450, 0.247 (P<0.001); the median APEs were 6.00%, 52.07% and 30.40%, and the median PEs were 5.00%, 18.50% and -3.50%; the prediction success rates were 98.45%, 30.05% and 49.22%. The predicted values of tacrolimus concentrations using JPKD, SmartDose, NextDose were (6.74±3.36), (6.93±5.02), 9.00(5.80±12.60) ng/mL, the measured value was 8.64(7.11,9.77) ng/mL, and the correlation coefficients between the predicted values and the measured value were 0.997 (P<0.001), -0.066 (P=0.360), 0.920 (P<0.001). The median APEs were 5.54%, 45.91% and 35.56%, and PEs were -4.94% (median), -17.050% (median) and 36.93% (average value); the prediction success rates were 97.93%, 32.64% and 37.31%. Univariate analysis showed that the dosage, blood concentration, body weight, transplantation time and others were related to the prediction accuracy (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS The good prediction rates of tacrolimus dose and blood concentration in kidney transplant patients using three personalized drug delivery tools, from high to low, are JPKD, NextDose, and SmartDose, suggesting that JPKD can be prioritized in clinical use.


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