17 research outputs found

    Carbon-sensitive pedotransfer functions for plant available water

    Get PDF
    Currently accepted pedotransfer functions show negligible effect of management-induced changes to soil organic carbon (SOC) on plant available water holding capacity (θAWHC), while some studies show the ability to substantially increase θAWHC through management. The Soil Health Institute\u27s North America Project to Evaluate Soil Health Measurements measured water content at field capacity using intact soil cores across 124 long-term research sites that contained increases in SOC as a result of management treatments such as reduced tillage and cover cropping. Pedotransfer functions were created for volumetric water content at field capacity (θFC) and permanent wilting point (θPWP). New pedotransfer functions had predictions of θAWHC that were similarly accurate compared with Saxton and Rawls when tested on samples from the National Soil Characterization database. Further, the new pedotransfer functions showed substantial effects of soil calcareousness and SOC on θAWHC. For an increase in SOC of 10 g kg–1 (1%) in noncalcareous soils, an average increase in θAWHC of 3.0 mm 100 mm–1 soil (0.03 m3 m–3) on average across all soil texture classes was found. This SOC related increase in θAWHC is about double previous estimates. Calcareous soils had an increase in θAWHC of 1.2 mm 100 mm–1 soil associated with a 10 g kg–1 increase in SOC, across all soil texture classes. New equations can aid in quantifying benefits of soil management practices that increase SOC and can be used to model the effect of changes in management on drought resilience

    Soil Biota Can Change after Exotic Plant Invasion: Does This Affect Ecosystem Processes?

    No full text
    Invasion of the exotic annual grass Bromus tectorum into stands of the native perennial grass Hilaria jamesii significantly reduced the abundance of soil biota, especially microarthropods and nematodes. Effects of invasion on active and total bacterial and fungal biomass were variable, although populations generally increased after 50+ years of invasion. The invasion of Bromus also resulted in a decrease in richness and a species shift in plants, microarthropods, fungi, and nematodes. However, despite the depauperate soil fauna at the invaded sites, no effects were seen on cellulose decomposition rates, nitrogen mineralization rates, or vascular plant growth. When Hilaria was planted into soils from not-invaded, recently invaded, and historically invaded sites (all currently or once dominated by Hilaria), germination and survivorship were not affected. In contrast, aboveground Hilaria biomass was significantly greater in recently invaded soils than in the other two soils. We attributed the Hilaria response to differences in soil nutrients present before the invasion, especially soil nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, as these nutrients were elevated in the soils that produced the greatest Hilaria biomass. Our data suggest that it is not soil biotic richness per se that determines soil process rates or plant productivity, but instead that either (1) the presence of a few critical soil food web taxa can keep ecosystem function high, (2) nutrient loss is very slow in this ecosystem, and/or (3) these processes are microbially driven. However, the presence of Bromus may reduce key soil nutrients over time and thus may eventually suppress native plant success

    Double-Blind Phase III Randomized Trial of the Antiprogestin Agent Mifepristone in the Treatment of Unresectable Meningioma: SWOG S9005

    No full text
    PURPOSE: Progesterone receptors are expressed in approximately 70% of meningiomas. Mifepristone is an oral antiprogestational agent reported to have modest activity in a phase II study. This multicenter, prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled phase III trial conducted by SWOG was planned to define the role of mifepristone in the treatment of unresectable meningioma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Eligible patients were randomly assigned to receive either mifepristone or placebo for 2 years unless disease progressed. Patients who were stable or responding to protocol therapy after 2 years had the option to continue with the same blinded therapy. Serial follow-up allowed assessment of efficacy and toxicity. Time to treatment failure and overall survival were ascertained for all randomly assigned patients. On progression, patients receiving placebo could cross over and receive active drug. RESULTS: Among 164 eligible patients, 80 were randomly assigned to mifepristone and 84 to placebo. Twenty-four patients (30%) were able to complete 2 years of mifepristone without disease progression, adverse effects, or other reasons for discontinuation. Twenty-eight patients (33%) in the placebo arm completed the 2-year study. There was no statistical difference between the arms in terms of failure-free or overall survival. CONCLUSION: Long-term administration of mifepristone was well tolerated but had no impact on patients with unresectable meningioma

    The value of secondary pathology review

    No full text
    6 Background: Improving the value of cancer care is a major focus for the Alliance of Dedicated Cancer Centers (ADCC). Looking to align with the Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) initiative to “Develop and deploy approaches to identify, learn from, and reduce diagnostic errors and near misses in clinical practice,” the ADCC implemented a study to examine the clinical impact of expert secondary pathology review. The goal of this project was to: 1) demonstrate the value of secondary review of outside pathological specimens by ADCC subspecialty pathologists in identifying significant errors that can potentially impact treatment; and 2) create an opportunity to improve patient cancer care. Methods: All consult slides from patients referred to each ADCC center were reviewed by designated pathologists. Patient-level data for original and revised diagnoses were collected for two months in 2014. Discrepancies were classified as: 1) major - diagnosis changes treatment or surveillance; or, 2) minor - diagnosis does not change affect treatment or surveillance. To verify these assessments, disease-specific, multi-center teams of clinical experts reviewed each discrepant case and provided treatment recommendations for the original and revised diagnoses. Results: A total of 13,109 cases were collected across all ADCC centers and the discrepancy rate was 11% (1,488/1309); 3% (359/13,109) were major and 9% (1,129/13,109) were minor. The most common discrepancy was reclassification of the neoplasm cell type. The highest discrepancy rate was shown in the neuro-oncology and head and neck cases, with a 7% and 4% major discrepancy rate respectively. Conclusions: We identified an overall discrepancy rate of 11%, with 3% of cases leading to a change in treatment or surveillance. This demonstrates the importance of expert pathology review and that secondary pathology review can significantly improve clinical outcomes through precise and accurate pathological diagnoses. As indicated in the recent IOM report, this project further demonstrates that “diagnostic errors may cause harm to patients by preventing or delaying appropriate treatment, providing unnecessary or harmful treatment, or resulting in psychological or financial repercussions.
    corecore