216 research outputs found

    Temporary labor migration and domestic economy in social reproduction strategies: the case of forest workers Bernardo de Irigoyen (Misiones, Argentina)

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    El objetivo de este artículo es analizar cómo las unidades domésticas participes de la migración laboral temporaria articulan distintos mecanismos de reproducción social, haciendo énfasis en el lugar que ocupan las prácticas agropecuarias a pequeña escala. Nuestro referente empírico es un conjunto de unidades domésticas ubicadas en la zona rural del municipio de Bernardo de Irigoyen (Misiones, Argentina) que cuentan con algún/os miembros que migran o han migrado hacía otras provincias para emplearse en el sector forestal. La metodología empleada es de tipo cualitativa mediante la utilización de entrevistas a miembros migrantes y no migrantes de las unidades domésticas analizadas, complementadas con observaciones. Este artículo concluye que en aquellos grupos domésticos con mayores dificultades de inserción al mercado laboral, las prácticas agropecuarias, junto con las transferencias monetarias estatales, son centrales en la reproducción social. Por el contrario, en aquellos casos en que algún miembro de la unidad doméstica sostiene una inserción al mercado laboral relativamente estable, las prácticas prediales tienen una importancia secundaria o nula para la subsistencia del grupo. Asimismo, las distintas formas de configuración de estrategias de reproducción varían según las características de la unidad doméstica y se vinculan con distintas formas de división familiar del trabajo, prácticas de consumo y estrategias de escolarización.The objective of this article is to analyze how domestic units participating in temporary labor migration articulate different mechanisms of social reproduction, emphasizing the place of small-scale farming practices. Our empirical reference is a set of domestic units located in the rural area of the municipality of Bernardo de Irigoyen (Misiones, Argentina) that have some members who migrate or have migrated to other provinces to be employed in the forestry sector. The methodology used is qualitative by using interviewees to migrant and non-migrant members of the domestic units analyzed, complemented by observations. This article concludes that in those groups with greater diffi culties of insertion in the labor market, the agricultural practices, together with the state monetary transfers, the threads in the social reproduction. On the contrary, in cases where a member of the household maintains an insertion in the stable labor market, property practices are of secondary importance to the subsistence of the group. Also, the diverse forms of confi guration of reproduction strategies vary according to the characteristics of the household and relate to different forms of family division of labor, consumption practices and schooling strategies.Fil: Albertí, Alfonsina Verónica. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Saavedra 15. Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones Laborales; Argentin

    Low-energy electronic properties of clean CaRuO3_3: elusive Landau quasiparticles

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    We have prepared high-quality epitaxial thin films of CaRuO3_3 with residual resistivity ratios up to 55. Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in the magnetoresistance and a T2T^2 temperature dependence in the electrical resistivity only below 1.5 K, whose coefficient is substantially suppressed in large magnetic fields, establish CaRuO3_3 as a Fermi liquid (FL) with anomalously low coherence scale. Non-Fermi liquid (NFL) T3/2T^{3/2} dependence is found between 2 and 25 K. The high sample quality allows access to the intrinsic electronic properties via THz spectroscopy. For frequencies below 0.6 THz, the conductivity is Drude-like and can be modeled by FL concepts, while for higher frequencies non-Drude behavior, inconsistent with FL predictions, is found. This establishes CaRuO3_3 as a prime example of optical NFL behavior in the THz range.Comment: 12 pages, 21 figures including supplemental materia

    Optical signatures of the superconducting Goldstone mode in granular aluminum: experiments and theory

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    Recent advances in the experimental growth and control of disordered thin films, heterostructures, and interfaces provide a fertile ground for the observation and characterisation of the collective superconducting excitations emerging below TcT_c after breaking the U(1)U(1) gauge symmetry. Here we combine THz experiments in a nano-structured granular Al thin film and theoretical calculations to demonstrate the existence of optically-active phase modes, which represent the Goldstone excitations of the broken gauge symmetry. By measuring the complex transmission trough the sample we identify a sizeable and temperature-dependent optical sub-gap absorption, which cannot be ascribed to quasiparticle excitations. A quantitative modelling of this material as a disordered Josephson array of nano-grains allows us to determine, with no free parameters, the structure of the spatial inhomogeneities induced by shell effects. Besides being responsible for the enhancement of the critical temperature with respect to bulk Al, already observed in the past, this spatial inhomogeneity provides a mechanism for the optical visibility of the Goldstone mode. By computing explicitly the optical spectrum of the superconducting phase fluctuations we obtain a good quantitative description of the experimental data. Our results demonstrate that nanograins arrays are a promising setting to study and control the collective superconducting excitations via optical means

    Cruise Report Poseidon 229a/b Kolbeinsey Ridge, Akureyri - Reykjavik, 22.05.1997 - 11.06.1997

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    General Subject of research: Detailed study of the shallow water hydrothermal system around Kolbeinsey and Grimsey island

    Ramucirumab in elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and elevated alpha-fetoprotein after sorafenib in REACH and REACH-2

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    Background & Aims: Limited data on treatment of elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) increase the unmet need. REACH and REACH-2 were global phase III studies of ramucirumab in patients with HCC after prior sorafenib, where patients with alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) ≥400 ng/mL showed an overall ssurvival (OS) benefit for ramucirumab. These post-hoc analyses examined efficacy and safety of ramucirumab in patients with HCC and baseline AFP â‰¥ 400 ng/mL by three prespecified age subgroups (<65, ≥65 to <75 and ≥75 years). Methods: Individual patient data were pooled from REACH (baseline AFP ≥400 ng/mL) and REACH-2. Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards regression methods (stratified by study) assessed OS, progression-free survival (PFS), time to progression (TTP) and patient-reported outcomes (Functional Hepatobiliary System Index-8 [FHSI-8] score). Results: A total of 542 patients (<65 years: n = 302; ≥65 to <75 years: n = 160; ≥75 years: n = 80) showed similar baseline characteristics between ramucirumab and placebo. Older subgroups had higher hepatitis C and steatohepatitis incidences, and lower AFP levels, than the <65 years subgroup. Ramucirumab prolonged OS in patients <65 years (hazard ratio [HR], 0.753; 95% CI 0.581-0.975), ≥65 to <75 years (0.602; 0.419-0.866) and ≥75 years (0.709; 0.420-1.199), PFS and TTP irrespective of age. Ramucirumab showed similar overall safety profiles across subgroups, with a consistent median relative dose intensity ≥97.8%. A trend towards a delay in symptom deterioration in FHSI-8 with ramucirumab was observed in all subgroups. Conclusions: In this post-hoc analysis, ramucirumab showed a survival benefit across age subgroups with a tolerable safety profile, supporting its use in advanced HCC with elevated AFP, irrespective of age, including ≥75 years

    Overall survival and objective response in advanced unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma: A subanalysis of the REFLECT study

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    Background & Aims: Validated surrogate endpoints for overall survival (OS) are important for expediting the clinical study and drug-development processes. Herein, we aimed to validate objective response as an independent predictor of OS in individuals with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) receiving systemic anti-angiogenic therapy. Methods: We investigated the association between objective response (investigator-assessed mRECIST, independent radiologic review [IRR] mRECIST and RECIST v1.1) and OS in REFLECT, a phase III study of lenvatinib vs. sorafenib. We conducted landmark analyses (Simon-Makuch) of OS by objective response at 2, 4, and 6 months after randomization. Results: Median OS was 21.6 months (95% CI 18.6–24.5) for responders (investigator-assessed mRECIST) vs. 11.9 months (95% CI 10.7–12.8) for non-responders (hazard ratio [HR] 0.61; 95% CI 0.49–0.76; p <0.001). Objective response by IRR per mRECIST and RECIST v1.1 supported the association with OS (HR 0.61; 95% CI 0.51–0.72; p <0.001 and HR 0.50; 95% CI 0.39–0.65; p <0.001, respectively). OS was significantly prolonged for responders vs. non-responders (investigator-assessed mRECIST) at the 2-month (HR 0.61; 95% CI 0.49–0.76; p <0.001), 4-month (HR 0.63; 95% CI 0.51–0.80; p <0.001), and 6-month (HR 0.68; 95% CI 0.54–0.86; p <0.001) landmarks. Results were similar when assessed by IRR, with both mRECIST and RECIST v1.1. An exploratory multivariate Cox regression analysis identified objective response by investigator-assessed mRECIST (HR 0.55; 95% CI 0.44–0.68; p <0.0001) and IRR-assessed RECIST v1.1 (HR 0.49; 95% CI, 0.38–0.64; p <0.0001) as independent predictors of OS in individuals with unresectable HCC. Conclusions: Objective response was an independent predictor of OS in individuals with unresectable HCC in REFLECT; additional studies are needed to confirm surrogacy. Participants achieving a complete or partial response by mRECIST or RECIST v1.1 had significantly longer survival vs. those with stable/progressive/non-evaluable disease. ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT01761266. Impact and implications: This analysis of data taken from a completed clinical trial (REFLECT) looked for any link between objective response and overall survival time in individuals with unresectable HCC receiving anti-angiogenic treatments. Significantly longer median overall survival was found for responders (21.6 months) vs. non-responders (11.9 months). Overall survival was also significantly longer for responders vs. non-responders (based on objective response status at 2, 4, and 6 months) in the landmark analysis. Our results indicate that objective response is an independent predictor of overall survival in this setting, confirming its validity as a rapid marker of efficacy that can be applied in phase II trials; however, further validation is required to determine is validity for other systemic treatments (e.g. immunotherapies), or as a surrogate of overall survival

    New Mutations in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Identified by Target Enrichment and Deep Sequencing

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    Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a heterogeneous disease without a well-defined genetic alteration responsible for the onset of the disease. Several lines of evidence coincide in identifying stimulatory and growth signals delivered by B-cell receptor (BCR), and co-receptors together with NFkB pathway, as being the driving force in B-cell survival in CLL. However, the molecular mechanism responsible for this activation has not been identified. Based on the hypothesis that BCR activation may depend on somatic mutations of the BCR and related pathways we have performed a complete mutational screening of 301 selected genes associated with BCR signaling and related pathways using massive parallel sequencing technology in 10 CLL cases. Four mutated genes in coding regions (KRAS, SMARCA2, NFKBIE and PRKD3) have been confirmed by capillary sequencing. In conclusion, this study identifies new genes mutated in CLL, all of them in cases with progressive disease, and demonstrates that next-generation sequencing technologies applied to selected genes or pathways of interest are powerful tools for identifying novel mutational changes
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