6 research outputs found

    Abstracts from the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Meeting 2016

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    A roadmap for mapping Food Science and Technology from scholarly publications on pulses

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    Mapping the evolution of a research field informs on its structure and its knowledge on which future research and innovations could be developed. Providing such analysis is essential to inform Science and Innovation policies, particularly for fields that need supports to be developed for the sustainability. Such a mapping can be achieved by combining bibliometric and text-mining approaches. Yet, no standardized method exists to conduct a large-scale analysis of a research field over decades, as opposed to classic reviews focusing on narrowly delineated topics. We defined a roadmap for mapping the research field of Food Science and Technology (FS&T) on pulses. This field is of particular interest, particularly in Europe, as pulse consumption needs to be developed for more sustainable and healthy diets. The scholarly output in this field keeps increasing, yet no study established a map of it to date. To initiate such a work, we queried the Web of Knowledge to delineate a corpus of 2,000 scholarly publications published between 1980 and 2018 on various pulse species and including at least one European author. Our approach combined the skills of experts in FS&T, scientometrics, and innovation economics. The clustering method used detected related research topics, revealing the structure of this field over time and the decelerating or front-run topics. Our analysis provides consistent information to Science and Innovation policies aimed at the development of pulses. Our developments also contribute to enrich the thesaurus for regenerating such science mapping on pulses, for new decades and/or by including a wider geographic area. Beyond this field, this methodological roadmap can be used for mapping any other research field

    Clinicopathological characteristics of urothelial bladder cancer in patients less than 40 years old

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    International audienceUrothelial bladder cancer (UBC) is rare in young patients and as a result little information as to tumor type and clinical course are available. We present clinicopathological data of a large series of patients less than 40 years with bladder carcinoma. We included in this retrospective study covering the period from 1992 to 2013 patients less than 40 years with a first diagnosis of bladder cancer. Lesions were classified according to the WHO 2004 classification by uropathologists of ten centers. Stage, grade, multifocality, smoking habits, recurrence, and survival were studied. The cohort comprised of 152 patients, 113 males and 39 females with a mean age of 33.2 years. The large majority of the patients (142) was diagnosed with an urothelial carcinoma, the ten others with various histopathological diagnoses. In the age group less than 30 years old, 40.3 % of the cases concerned a papillary urothelial neoplasia of low malignant potential (PUNLMP). In the age group over 30 years, the proportion of PUNLMP decreased to 27.2 %. Only 5.6 % of the UBC was associated with carcinoma in situ. In 14.1 %, a high grade muscle invasive UC was found; 7.0 % had lymph node and 4.9 % distant metastasis at time of presentation. Four patients presented with a history of schistosomiasis; all had an infiltrating carcinoma. After initial resection, 36 patients relapsed, 17 % as PUNLMP, 53 % as pTa low grade, and 30 % as pTa-pT2 high grade UC. During follow-up, 6 % of the patients died. PUNLMP is the most frequent entity in this patient group. It is important that the PUNLMP entity is maintained in future classification systems

    IGF-1R associates with adverse outcomes after radical radiotherapy for prostate cancer

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    Background: Activated type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptors (IGF-1Rs) undergo internalisation and nuclear translocation, promoting cell survival. We previously reported that IGF-1R inhibition delays DNA damage repair, sensitising prostate cancer cells to ionising radiation. Here we tested the clinical relevance of these findings. Methods: We assessed associations between IGF-1R and clinical outcomes by immunohistochemistry in diagnostic biopsies of 136 men treated with 55-70 Gy external beam radiotherapy for prostate cancer, comparing results with publicly available transcriptional data in surgically treated patients. Results: Following radiotherapy, overall recurrence-free survival was shorter in patients whose tumours contained high total, cytoplasmic and internalised (nuclear/cytoplasmic) IGF-1R. High total IGF-1R associated with high primary Gleason grade and risk of metastasis, and cytoplasmic and internalised IGF-1R with biochemical recurrence, which includes patients experiencing local recurrence within the radiation field indicating radioresistance. In multivariate analysis, cytoplasmic, internalised and total IGF-1R were independently associated with risk of overall recurrence, and cytoplasmic IGF-1R was an independent predictor of biochemical recurrence post radiotherapy. Insulin-like growth factor receptors expression did not associate with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy. Conclusions: These data reveal increased risk of post-radiotherapy recurrence in men whose prostate cancers contain high levels of total or cytoplasmic IGF-1R
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