822 research outputs found

    Protocol and standard operating procedures for common use in a worldwide multicenter study on reference values

    Get PDF
    The reference intervals (RIs) given in laboratory reports have an important role in aiding clinicians in interpreting test results in reference to values of healthy populations. In this report, we present a proposed protocol and standard operating procedures (SOPs) for common use in conducting multicenter RI studies on a national or international scale. The protocols and consensus on their contents were refined through discussions in recent C-RIDL meetings. The protocol describes in detail (1) the scheme and organization of the study, (2) the target population, inclusion/exclusion criteria, ethnicity, and sample size, (3) health status questionnaire, (4) target analytes, (5) blood collection, (6) sample processing and storage, (7) assays, (8) cross-check testing, (9) ethics, (10) data analyses, and (11) reporting of results. In addition, the protocol proposes the common measurement of a panel of sera when no standard materials exist for harmonization of test results. It also describes the requirements of the central laboratory, including the method of cross-check testing between the central laboratory of each country and local laboratories. This protocol and the SOPs remain largely exploratory and may require a reevaluation from the practical point of view after their implementation in the ongoing worldwide study. The paper is mainly intended to be a basis for discussion in the scientific community.Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (24256003

    Heart-Type Fatty Acid-Binding Protein Predicts Long-Term Mortality and Re-Infarction in Consecutive Patients With Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome Who Are Troponin-Negative

    Get PDF
    ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to establish the prognostic value of measuring heart fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABP) in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS) (in particular, low- to intermediate-risk patients), in addition to troponin measured with the latest third-generation troponin assay.BackgroundWe have previously shown that H-FABP is a useful prognostic marker in patients with proven ACS.MethodsPatients (n = 1,080) consecutively admitted to the hospital with suspected ACS were recruited over 46 weeks. Siemens Advia Ultra-TnI (Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics, Newbury, United Kingdom) and Randox Evidence H-FABP (Randox Laboratories, Ltd., Co., Antrim, United Kingdom) were analyzed on samples collected 12 to 24 h from symptom onset. After exclusion of patients with ST-segment elevation and new left bundle branch block, 955 patients were included in the analysis.ResultsThe primary outcome measure of death or readmission with myocardial infarction after a minimum follow-up period of 12 months (median 18 months) occurred in 96 of 955 patients (10.1%). The H-FABP concentration was an independent predictor of death or myocardial infarction, after multivariate adjustment. Patients with H-FABP concentrations >6.48 μg/l had significantly increased risk of adverse events (adjusted hazard ratio: 2.62, 95% confidence interval: 1.30 to 5.28, p = 0.007). Among troponin-negative patients (which constituted 79.2% of the cohort), the aforementioned cutoff of 6.48 μg/l identified patients at very high risk for adverse outcomes independent of patient age and serum creatinine.ConclusionsWe have demonstrated that the prognostic value of elevated H-FABP is additive to troponin in low- and intermediate-risk patients with suspected ACS. Other studies suggest that our observations reflect the value of H-FABP as a marker of myocardial ischemia, even in the absence of frank necrosis

    Lipogenesis by Isolated Human Apocrine Sweat Glands: Testosterone Has no Effect During Long-Term Organ Maintenance

    Get PDF
    Lipid synthesis by freshly isolated human apocrine glands has been measured by the incorporation of [U-14C] acetate. Incorporation is linear over 6h at 1010 ± 282 pmol/mg wet weight/h (n = 11; mean ± sem). The lipid classes, as percentages of the total lipid synthesized, were found by TLC to be cholesterol 12.3 ± 2.0, mono-glycerides 7.5 ± 1.5, 1,2 di-glycerides 3.0 ± 0.9, 1,3 di-glycerides 3.5 ± 0.5, tri-glycerides 28.4 ± 1.8, free fatty acids 2.0 ± 0.4, lysolecithin 15.4 ± 3.9, sphingomyelin 9.9 ± 4.3, phosphatidyl-choline 8.4 ± 0.4, phosphatidyl-ethanolamine -inositol and -serine 1.8 ± 0.1, phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin 3.3 ± 0.5, and unidentified 3.3 ± 0.5 (mean ± sem, n = 5); Glands were maintained on permeable supports. After 10 d maintenance, electron microscopy showed that the cellular architecture had been preserved, that the ATP contents were the same as in freshly isolated glands, and that [U-14]C] acetate incorporation was not significantly altered at 851 ± 237 pmol/mg/h (n = 18). The addition of 3μM testosterone had no effect on acetate incorporation at 844 ± 231 pmol/mg/h (n = 18). The lipid classes and their proportions were similar to the values for fresh glands after 10 d maintenance both with and without testosterone

    In Vivo Quantification of Placental Insufficiency by BOLD MRI: A Human Study

    Get PDF
    Fetal health is critically dependent on placental function, especially placental transport of oxygen from mother to fetus. When fetal growth is compromised, placental insufficiency must be distinguished from modest genetic growth potential. If placental insufficiency is present, the physician must trade off the risk of prolonged fetal exposure to placental insufficiency against the risks of preterm delivery. Current ultrasound methods to evaluate the placenta are indirect and insensitive. We propose to use Blood-Oxygenation-Level-Dependent (BOLD) MRI with maternal hyperoxia to quantitatively assess mismatch in placental function in seven monozygotic twin pairs naturally matched for genetic growth potential. In-utero BOLD MRI time series were acquired at 29 to 34 weeks gestational age. Maps of oxygen Time-To-Plateau (TTP) were obtained in the placentas by voxel-wise fitting of the time series. Fetal brain and liver volumes were measured based on structural MR images. After delivery, birth weights were obtained and placental pathological evaluations were performed. Mean placental TTP negatively correlated with fetal liver and brain volumes at the time of MRI as well as with birth weights. Mean placental TTP positively correlated with placental pathology. This study demonstrates the potential of BOLD MRI with maternal hyperoxia to quantify regional placental function in vivo.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant U01 HD087211)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01 EB017337

    Diabetes Mellitus and Mortality after Acute Coronary Syndrome as a First or Recurrent Cardiovascular Event

    Get PDF
    Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is associated with adverse cardiovascular prognosis. However, the risk associated with DM may vary between individuals according to their overall cardiovascular risk burden. Therefore, we aimed to determine whether DM is associated with poor outcome in patients presenting with Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) according to the index episode being a first or recurrent cardiovascular event.We conducted a retrospective analysis of a prospective cohort study involving 2499 consecutively admitted patients with confirmed ACS in 11 UK hospitals during 2003. Usual care was provided for all participants. Demographic factors, co-morbidity and treatment (during admission and at discharge) factors were recorded. The primary outcome was all cause mortality (median 2 year follow up), compared for cohorts with and without DM according to their prior cardiovascular disease (CVD) disease status. Adjusted analyses were performed with Cox proportional hazards regression analysis. Within the entire cohort, DM was associated with an unadjusted 45% increase in mortality. However, in patients free of a history of CVD, mortality of those with and without DM was similar (18.8% and 19.7% respectively; p = 0.74). In the group with CVD, mortality of patients with DM was significantly higher than those without DM (46.7% and 33.2% respectively; p<0.001). The age and sex adjusted interaction between DM and CVD in predicting mortality was highly significant (p = 0.002) and persisted after accounting for comorbidities and treatment factors (p = 0.006). Of patients free of CVD, DM was associated with smaller elevation of Troponin I (p<0.001). However in patients with pre-existing CVD Troponin I was similar (p = 0.992).DM is only associated with worse outcome after ACS in patients with a pre-existing history of CVD. Differences in the severity of myocyte necrosis may account for this. Further investigation is required, though our findings suggest that aggressive primary prevention of CVD in patients with DM may have beneficially modified their first presentation with (and mortality after) ACS

    Managerial power in the German model: the case of Bertelsmann and the antecedents of neoliberalism

    Get PDF
    Our article extends the research on authoritarian neoliberalism to Germany, through a history of the Bertelsmann media corporation – sponsor and namesake of Germany’s most influential neoliberal think-tank. Our article makes three conceptual moves. Firstly, we argue that conceptualizing German neoliberalism in terms of an ‘ordoliberal paradigm’ is of limited use in explaining the rise and fall of Germany’s distinctive socio-economic model (Modell Deutschland). Instead, we locate the origins of authoritarian tendencies in the corporate power exercised by managers rather than in the power of state-backed markets imagined by ordoliberals. Secondly, we focus on the managerial innovations of Bertelsmann as a key actor enmeshed with Modell Deutschland. We show that the adaptation of business management practices of an endogenous ‘Cologne School’ empowered Bertelsmann’s postwar managers to overcome existential crises and financial constraints despite being excluded from Germany’s corporate support network. Thirdly, we argue that their further development in the 1970s also enabled Bertelsmann to curtail and circumvent the forms of labour representation associated with Modell Deutschland. Inspired by cybernetic management theories that it used to limit and control rather than revive market competition among its workforce, Bertelsmann began to act and think outside the postwar settlement between capital and labour before the settlement’s hotly-debated demise since the 1990s

    A global multicenter study on reference values: 2. Exploration of sources of variation across the countries.

    Get PDF
    This global multicenter study on reference values (RVs) allowed us to explore biological sources of variation (SVs) of RVs across the world.As described in the first part of this paper, RVs of 50 major analytes from 13,396 healthy individuals living in 12 countries were obtained. Analyzed in this study were 23 clinical chemistry analytes and 8 analytes measured by immunoturbidimetry. Multiple regression analysis was performed for each gender, country by country, analyte by analyte, by setting four major SVs (age, BMI, and levels of drinking and smoking) as a fixed set of explanatory variables. For analytes with skewed distributions, log-transformation was applied. The association of each source of variation with RVs was expressed as partial correlation coefficient (rp).Obvious gender and age-related changes in the RVs were observed in many analytes, almost consistently between countries. Compilation of age-related change profiles of RVs after adjusting for between-country differences revealed peculiar patterns specific to each analyte. Judged fromrp, BMI related changes were observed in many nutritional and inflammatory markers in almost all countries. However, the slope of linear BMI vs. RV relationship differed greatly among countries for some analytes. Alcohol and smoking-related changes were observed less conspicuously in a limited number of analytes.Features of sex, age, alcohol, and smoking-related changes in RVs of major analytes were almost comparable worldwide. The finding of differences in BMI-related changes among countries in some analytes is quite relevant to understanding ethnic differences in susceptibility to nutritionally related diseases

    Cyclin H expression is increased in GIST with very-high risk of malignancy

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Risk estimation of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST) is based on tumour size and mitotic rate according to the National Institutes of Health consensus classification. The indication for adjuvant treatment of patients with high risk GIST after R<sub>0 </sub>resection with small molecule inhibitors is still a controversial issue, since these patients represent a highly heterogeneous population. Therefore, additional prognostic indicators are needed. Here, we evaluated the prognostic value of cyclin H expression in GIST.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In order to identify prognostic factors of GIST we evaluated a single centre cohort of ninety-five GIST patients. First, GISTs were classified with regard to tumour size, mitotic rate and localisation according to the NIH consensus and to three additional suggested risk classifications. Second, Cyclin H expression was analysed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Of ninety-five patients with GIST (53 female/42 male; median age: 66.78a; range 17-94a) risk classification revealed: 42% high risk, 20% intermediate risk, 23% low risk and 15% very low risk GIST. In patients with high risk GIST, the expression of cyclin H was highly predictive for reduced disease-specific survival (p = 0.038). A combination of cyclin H expression level and high risk classification yielded the strongest prognostic indicator for disease-specific and disease-free survival (p ≤ 0.001). Moreover, in patients with tumour recurrence and/or metastases, cyclin H positivity was significantly associated with reduced disease-specific survival (p = 0.016) regardless of risk-classification.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our data suggest that, in addition to high risk classification, cyclin H expression might be an indicator for "very-high risk" GIST.</p
    corecore