6,920 research outputs found
A Non-Principal Value Prescription for the Temporal Gauge
A non-principal value prescription is used to define the spurious
singularities of Yang-Mills theory in the temporal gauge. Typical one-loop
dimensionally-regularized temporal-gauge integrals in the prescription are
explicitly calculated, and a regularization for the spurious gauge divergences
is introduced. The divergent part of the one-loop self-energy is shown to be
local and has the same form as that in the spatial axial gauge with the
principal-value prescription. The renormalization of the theory is also briefly
mentioned.Comment: 13 pages, NCKU-HEP/93-0
Accuracy of hysteroscopic biopsy, compared to dilation and curettage, as a predictor of final pathology in patients with endometrial cancer
AbstractObjectiveTo compare the methods of transcervical resectoscopy versus dilation and curettage (D&C) for endometrial biopsy and to compare these methods for the percentage of histological upgrades at the final posthysterectomy pathology findings in endometrial cancer.Materials and methodsWe retrospectively reviewed 253 cases of uterine cancer diagnosed from May 1995 to January 2014. Included in the study were patients who received transcervical resectoscopy (TCR) or D&C biopsy as the diagnostic method and underwent laparoscopic staging at our institution. The International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians (FIGO) grade in the pathological report of the biopsy and final hysterectomy were recorded. The extrauterine risk was stratified using the initial FIGO grade and depth of myometrium invasion. It was compared to the actual risk using final pathological findings.ResultsWe identified 203 cases of endometrial cancer; 18 (8.9%) patients had a higher histological grade at the final hysterectomy. Among the 203 patients, 76 patients underwent TCR biopsy and 127 underwent D&C biopsy. The histological grade was upgraded in two (2.6%) patients in the TCR group. Three (3.9%) patients had positive peritoneal washings. In the D&C group, 16 (12.6%) patients with three (2.4%) positive peritoneal washings were upgraded.ConclusionTranscervical resectoscopy could provide more precise grading information, compared to D&C (2.6% vs. 12.6%). Doctors could therefore make a more accurate staging plan, based on the preoperative risk evaluation
A Broadband Superabsorber at Optical Frequencies: Design and Demonstration
Metasurface based super absorbers exhibit near unity absorbance. While the
absorption peak can be tuned by the geometry/size of the sub-wavelength
resonator, broadband absorption can be obtained by placing multiple resonators
of various size or shapes in a unit cell. Metal dispersion hinders high
performance broadband absorption at optical frequencies and careful designing
is essential to achieve good structures. We propose a novel analytical
framework for designing a broadband super absorber which is much faster than
the time consuming full wave simulations that are employed so far. Analytical
expressions are derived for the wavelength dependency of the design parameters,
which are then used in the optimization of broadband absorption. Numerical
simulations report an average polarization-independent absorption of ~97 in the
450 to 950 nm spectral region with a near unity absorption (99.36) in the 500
to 850 nm region. Experimentally, we demonstrate an average absorption over 98
in the 450 to 950 nm spectral region at 20 degree incident angle The designed
super absorber is polarization insensitive and has a weak launch angle
dependency. The proposed framework simplifies the design process and provides a
quicker optimal solution for high performance broadband super absorbers
Phase 2 Study of Anti-Human Cytomegalovirus Monoclonal Antibodies for Prophylaxis in Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation.
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can cause significant disease in immunocompromised patients, and treatment options are limited by toxicities. CSJ148 is a combination of two anti-HCMV human monoclonal antibodies (LJP538 and LJP539) that bind to and inhibit the functions of viral HCMV glycoprotein B (gB) and the pentameric complex, consisting of glycoproteins gH, gL, UL128, UL130, and UL131. In this phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of CSJ148 for prophylaxis of HCMV in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. As would be expected in the study population, all the patients (100%) reported at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. There were 22 deaths during this study, and over 80% of the patients receiving placebo or CSJ148 developed at least one adverse event of grade 3 or higher severity. No subject who received antibody developed a hypersensitivity- or infusion-related reaction. CSJ148-treated patients showed trends toward decreased viral load, shorter median duration of preemptive therapy, and fewer courses of preemptive therapy. However, the estimated probability that CSJ148 decreases the need for preemptive therapy compared to placebo was 69%, with a risk ratio of 0.89 and a 90% credible interval of 0.61 to 1.31. The primary efficacy endpoint was therefore not met, indicating that CSJ148 did not prevent clinically significant HCMV reactivation in recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplants. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifier NCT02268526 and at EudraCT under number 2017-002047-15.)
FormNetV2: Multimodal Graph Contrastive Learning for Form Document Information Extraction
The recent advent of self-supervised pre-training techniques has led to a
surge in the use of multimodal learning in form document understanding.
However, existing approaches that extend the mask language modeling to other
modalities require careful multi-task tuning, complex reconstruction target
designs, or additional pre-training data. In FormNetV2, we introduce a
centralized multimodal graph contrastive learning strategy to unify
self-supervised pre-training for all modalities in one loss. The graph
contrastive objective maximizes the agreement of multimodal representations,
providing a natural interplay for all modalities without special customization.
In addition, we extract image features within the bounding box that joins a
pair of tokens connected by a graph edge, capturing more targeted visual cues
without loading a sophisticated and separately pre-trained image embedder.
FormNetV2 establishes new state-of-the-art performance on FUNSD, CORD, SROIE
and Payment benchmarks with a more compact model size.Comment: Accepted to ACL 202
Enhancement of radiosensitivity in human glioblastoma cells by the DNA N-mustard alkylating agent BO-1051 through augmented and sustained DNA damage response
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>1-{4-[Bis(2-chloroethyl)amino]phenyl}-3-[2-methyl-5-(4-methylacridin-9-ylamino)phenyl]urea (BO-1051) is an N-mustard DNA alkylating agent reported to exhibit antitumor activity. Here we further investigate the effects of this compound on radiation responses of human gliomas, which are notorious for the high resistance to radiotherapy.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The clonogenic assay was used to determine the IC<sub>50 </sub>and radiosensitivity of human glioma cell lines (U87MG, U251MG and GBM-3) following BO-1051. DNA histogram and propidium iodide-Annexin V staining were used to determine the cell cycle distribution and the apoptosis, respectively. DNA damage and repair state were determined by γ-H2AX foci, and mitotic catastrophe was measure using nuclear fragmentation. Xenograft tumors were measured with a caliper, and the survival rate was determined using Kaplan-Meier method.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>BO-1051 inhibited growth of human gliomas in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Using the dosage at IC<sub>50</sub>, BO-1051 significantly enhanced radiosensitivity to different extents [The sensitizer enhancement ratio was between 1.24 and 1.50 at 10% of survival fraction]. The radiosensitive G<sub>2</sub>/M population was raised by BO-1051, whereas apoptosis and mitotic catastrophe were not affected. γ-H2AX foci was greatly increased and sustained by combined BO-1051 and γ-rays, suggested that DNA damage or repair capacity was impaired during treatment. <it>In vivo </it>studies further demonstrated that BO-1051 enhanced the radiotherapeutic effects on GBM-3-beared xenograft tumors, by which the sensitizer enhancement ratio was 1.97. The survival rate of treated mice was also increased accordingly.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These results indicate that BO-1051 can effectively enhance glioma cell radiosensitivity <it>in vitro </it>and <it>in vivo</it>. It suggests that BO-1051 is a potent radiosensitizer for treating human glioma cells.</p
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