37 research outputs found

    Inter-University International Collaboration for an Online Course: A Case Study

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    This paper is a practical account of the experience of collaboration between two international partners – one in Europe and the other in the United States. This collaboration experience is a lens through which the authors outline the origin, design and implementation of an inter-university teaching experience. The processes, strengths and difficulties are outlined and the rationale for utilising a virtual world is given, along with the participants’ perspectives of the experience. No institutional changes or formal agreements were needed. The same course was validated and accredited by each institution and designed to address the requirements of each with the responsibility for participant progress and assessment remaining with the home institution. The paper discusses issues of coordination and makes recommendations for developing similar collaborations

    Chronically Sun-damaged Melanomas Express Low Levels of Nuclear Glutathione-S-transferase-π: An Epidemiological and Clinicopathological Study in Italy

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    The detoxifying enzyme glutathione–s–transferase pi (GST–π) is present in keratinocytes and melanocytes and exerts a protective role against tumour progression. Melanomas close to melanocytic naevus remnants occur less frequently on sun-exposed areas, whereas solar dermal elastosis, hallmark of chronic sun-damage, characterise melanomas on sun-exposed skin. We evaluated the expression of GST-π in 113 melanomas associated to melanocytic naevus remnants or to solar dermal elastosis, classified according to clinical characteristics, history of sun exposure, histological subtypes and AJCC staging. Chronically sun-damaged melanomas, identified by moderate–severe solar dermal elastosis, showed a lower nuclear GST-π expression and a higher thickness than those related to melanocytic naevus remnants (p < 0.03). Multivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that male gender and chronic sun-exposure are independent risk factors significantly associated to melanomas localised on the trunk (OR = 3.36, 95% CI: 1.31–8.65; OR = 5.97, 95% CI: 1.71–20.87). If confirmed on a larger series, lower expression of nuclear GST-π in melanom

    MCAM/MUC18/CD146 as a multifaceted warning marker of melanoma progression in liquid biopsy

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    Human malignant melanoma shows a high rate of mortality after metastasization, and its incidence is continuously rising worldwide. Several studies have suggested that MCAM/MUC18/CD146 plays an important role in the progression of this malignant disease. MCAM/MUC18/CD146 is a typical single-spanning transmembrane glycoprotein, existing as two membrane isoforms, long and short, and an additional soluble form, sCD146. We previously documented that molecular MCAM/MUC18/CD146 expression is strongly associated with disease progression. Recently, we showed that MCAM/MUC18/CD146 and ABCB5 can serve as melanoma-specific-targets in the selection of highly primitive circulating melanoma cells, and constitute putative proteins associated with disease spreading progression. Here, we analyzed CD146 molecular expression at onset or at disease recurrence in an enlarged melanoma case series. For some patients, we also performed the time courses of molecular monitoring. Moreover, we explored the role of soluble CD146 in different cohorts of melanoma patients at onset or disease progression, rather than in clinical remission, undergoing immune therapy or free from any clinical treatment. We showed that MCAM/MUC18/CD146 can be considered as: (1) a membrane antigen suitable for identification and enrichment in melanoma liquid biopsy; (2) a highly effective molecular "warning " marker for minimal residual disease monitoring; and (3) a soluble protein index of inflammation and putative response to therapeutic treatments

    The Usability of E-learning Platforms in Higher Education: A Systematic Mapping Study

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    The use of e-learning in higher education has increased significantly in recent years, which has led to several studies being conducted to investigate the usability of the platforms that support it. A variety of different usability evaluation methods and attributes have been used, and it has therefore become important to start reviewing this work in a systematic way to determine how the field has developed in the last 15 years. This paper describes a systematic mapping study that performed searches on five electronic libraries to identify usability issues and methods that have been used to evaluate e-learning platforms. Sixty-one papers were selected and analysed, with the majority of studies using a simple research design reliant on questionnaires. The usability attributes measured were mostly related to effectiveness, satisfaction, efficiency, and perceived ease of use. Furthermore, several research gaps have been identified and recommendations have been made for further work in the area of the usability of online learning

    Minimal residual disease in melanoma: circulating melanoma cells and predictive role of MCAM/MUC18/MelCAM/CD146

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    Circulating tumour cells (CTCs), identified in numerous cancers including melanoma, are unquestionably considered valuable and useful as diagnostic and prognostic markers. They can be detected at all melanoma stages and may persist long after treatment. A crucial step in metastatic processes is the intravascular invasion of neoplastic cells as circulating melanoma cells (CMCs). Only a small percentage of these released cells are efficient and capable of colonizing with a strong metastatic potential. CMCs' ability to survive in circulation express a variety of genes with continuous changes of signal pathways and proteins to escape immune surveillance. This makes it difficult to detect them; therefore, specific isolation, enrichment and characterization of CMC population could be useful to monitor disease status and patient clinical outcome. Overall and disease-free survival have been correlated with the presence of CMCs. Specific melanoma antigens, in particular MCAM (MUC18/MelCAM/CD146), could be a potentially useful tool to isolate CMCs as well as be a prognostic, predictive biomarker. These are the areas reviewed in the article

    HLA class I in acute promyelocitic leukemia (APL): possible correlation with clinical outcome.

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    The majority of patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) possess either a bcr1 or a bcr3 type fusion between PML and RARalpha genes. The junction sequences may possibly be a target for immune response and influence susceptibility to the disease. In this case, HLA class I allele frequencies would be different between bcr1 and bcr3 patients. To test this hypothesis, we typed 102 APL patients for HLA-A, -B and -Cw alleles. The A*1, A*30, B*51, B*41, Cw*0602, and Cw*1701 alleles showed a different distribution between bcr1 and bcr3 patients, but in no case was this statistically significant after correction for the number of comparisons or was confirmed in an independent panel. Moreover, no difference was detected between bcr1 and bcr3 when HLA alleles were grouped according to their peptide binding specificities. Comparing HLA frequencies, clinical features at diagnosis and clinical outcome of the 64 patients homogeneously treated with all-trans retinoic acid and idarubicin (AIDA protocol) we observed a statistically significant association between HLA-B*13 and risk of relapse by univariate and multivariate regression analysis. Should this finding be confirmed in larger future studies, this observation would be of outmost importance in identifying patients at high risk of relapse in which more aggressive consolidation therapies should be used

    Melanoma-associated markers expression in blood: MUC-18 is associated with advanced stages in melanoma patients

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    Multimarker reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was originally reported to reveal melanoma-associated mRNAs (MAMs) in melanoma cells but not in the peripheral blood of healthy individuals. To evaluate the expression of MAMs in the peripheral blood of melanoma patients at different American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stages, and to correlate their presence with early and/or advanced stages of the disease. One hundred blood samples of melanoma patients (AJCC I-IV) were analysed using multimarker RT-PCR to assess the co-expression of Tyr-OH, MART-1, MAGE-3, MUC-18/MCAM and p97. Patients were stratified into two disease categories: early and advanced stages. The former includes in situ and melanoma stages AJCC I-II, the latter AJCC III-IV. chi(2) and Fisher's exact tests were used to statistically evaluate the association between each MAM and disease categories. The recognized significant associations were subsequently resubmitted to univariate logistic regression. Furthermore, sensitivity and specificity were established. At least one MAM could be detected in 24% of our series. Tyr-OH was the most common marker (14%), followed by MUC-18 (12%), MART-1 (5%), MAGE-3 (4%) and p97 (3%). No significant association among Tyr-OH, MART-1, MAGE-3, p97 and disease stages were evidenced. Only MUC-18 was statistically associated (P < 0.009) with advanced stages alone or co-expressed with other MAMs. According to logistic regression univariate analysis, MUC-18 increases the probability (odds ratio: 33) being in advanced stages and the incidence of recurrences (95% CI 2.9-374). MUC-18 RT-PCR assay could be proposed as an adjunctive molecular method in the management of melanoma patients and is useful in the monitoring of study protocols

    Prognostic relevance of ALL-1 gene rearrangement in infant acute leukemias

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    We and others have recently reported a high frequency (70-80%) of ALL-1 (MLL, HRX, HTRX) gene rearrangements in infants with acute leukemias (AL) aged less than 1 year. Preliminary observations in limited series also suggested that ALL-1 gene configuration is an important prognostic factor in this leukemic subset. We have now extended our study to a series of 45 AL patients aged between 0 and 18 months. The genomic configuration of ALL-1 in leukemic DNAs was determined by Southern blot hybridization and correlated with biological and clinical features at presentation, as well as with treatment outcome. Twenty-nine out of 45 (64%) patients showed ALL-1 rearrangements, including 4/11 (36%) infants aged between 13 and 18 months. Considering morphological types, 24/38 cases with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and 5/7 patients with acute myeloid leukemia showed ALL-1 rearrangements. The features more frequently found in association with ALL-1 rearrangements were hyperleukocytosis (P 12 months. We show that this genetic lesion is the most important variable negatively affecting prognosis in a multivariate model including other known risk factors. This latter observation should influence the choice of risk-adapted treatment strategies in this AL subse
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