242 research outputs found
Tourism, transport, and land use: a dynamic impact assessment for Kaohsiungâs Asia New Bay Area
This paper proposes a hybrid methodology for analysing the causal relations between public transportation development, tourism and land use by combining System Dynamics (SD) with Geographical Information Systems (GIS) and agent-based modelling (ABM). It is applied to illustrate the quantitative and spatial effect of the two phases Light Rail Transit (LRT) development in Asia New Bay Area, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. This paper also furthers the application of the ABM spatial information as interactive variables in the stocks-flow model. The simulation results support that development policies of LRT are significant to the future tourism in Asia New Bay Area, while the under debate second phase of LRT is estimated to raise the number of visitors in long term by alleviating the deteriorating road traffic congestion. This policy-oriented simulation can serve as a reference to the decision-makers towards the future management of LRT
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Lymphovascular Invasion in Colorectal Cancer: An Interobserver Variability Study
Background: Lymphovascular invasion (LVI) in colorectal cancer (CRC) is considered a strong stage-independent prognostic factor and influences decisions regarding adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with Stage II tumors. However, the degree of interobserver agreement among pathologists for LVI in CRC is largely unknown. This study was undertaken to examine such interobserver variability, and we hypothesized that the use of immunohistochemical markers for vascular and lymphatic channels could improve interobserver agreement. Design: Fifty cases of AJCC stage II moderately differentiated CRC from 1990 to 2005 from the pathology archives were selected; mucinous, medullary, and other recognized special subtypes were excluded. Fifty H&E slides (one from each case) were circulated to 6 GI pathologists, who independently assessed small and large vessel invasion. No diagnostic guidelines were given to the participating pathologists; each was instructed to apply the criteria for LVI that he or she used in daily practice. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) for D2-40 and CD31 was performed on corresponding paraffin blocks. The IHC slides were randomized, recirculated, and rescored for LVI. Results were analyzed by kappa (Îș)statistics, which correct for agreement by chance, and for percent agreement. Results: The average Îș values were determined for the H&E slides (large and small vessel), CD31 (small vessel), and D2-40 (small vessel) (Figure 1). Agreement was fair for H&E small vessel invasion (Îș = 0.28; 95%CI 0.22â0.34). The least agreement was seen in interpretation of H&E large vessel invasion (Îș = 0.18; 95%CI 0.11â0.26). Agreement was not improved by use of immunohistochemical stains: CD31 (large vessel, Îș = 0.42, 95%CI 0.20â0.63, small vessel, Îș = 0.26, 95%CI 0.10â0.42) and D2-40 (Îș = 0.32, 95%CI 0.21â0.42). Conclusions: Interobserver variability in diagnosis of LVI was substantial on H&E slides and did not improve upon use of IHC. Agreement in evaluation of large vessel invasion was only slightly higher than would be seen by chance alone. This study highlights the need for criteria in evaluation of lymphovascular invasion, as this assessment may impact patient prognosis and thus change the course of clinical treatment
The ânew normalityâ in research? What message are we conveying our medical students?
The impact of COVID-19
on medical education has been
mainly viewed from the perspective of the imposed transition
from face-to-
face
to online delivery of information and
the inforced stopping of practical teaching in hospitals.1-5
However, unfortunately, the deleterious effects of COVID-19
on how research findings are obtained, communicated and
valued needs also careful consideration. Whilst teaching students
that it is a genuinely exciting and unique time to be
in medicine, as teachers of a subject entitled âIntroduction
to Researchâ to second-year
medical students, we feel particularly
worried about what the handling of the pandemia
is transmitting our future physicians. Now, more than ever
before, scholars need to reaffirm the importance on how research
findings are obtained and communicated
Association of immunotherapy and immunosuppression with severe COVID-19 disease in patients with cancer
Background: Cytokine storm due to COVID-19 can cause high morbidity and mortality. Patients with cancer treated with immunotherapy (IO) and those with immunosuppression may have higher rates of cytokine storm due to immune dysregulation. We sought to evaluate the association of IO and immunosuppression with COVID-19 outcomes and cytokine storm occurrence among patients with cancer and COVID-19, based on data from the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19).
Methods: A registry-based retrospective cohort study was conducted on patients reported to the CCC19 registry from March 2020 to September 2021. The primary outcome was defined as an ordinal scale of COVID-19 severity. The secondary outcome was the occurrence of a cytokine storm using CCC19 variables, defined as biological and clinical evidence of severe inflammation, with end-organ dysfunction (Fajgenbaum D.C. et al., N Engl J Med., 2020). The association of IO or immunosuppression with the outcomes of interest were evaluated using a multivariable logistic regression balanced for covariate distributions through inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW).
Results: A total of 10,214 patients were included, among which 482 (4.7%) received IO, 3,715 (36.4%) received non-IO systemic therapies, and 6,017 (58.9%) were untreated in the 3 months prior to COVID-19 diagnosis. No difference in COVID-19 severity or the development of a cytokine storm was found in the IO group compared to the untreated group (aOR: 0.77; 95%CI:0.45-1.32, and aOR: 1.06; 95%CI:0.42-2.67, respectively). On multivariable analysis, baseline immunosuppression was associated with worse outcomes both in relation to COVID-19 severity (aOR: 1.89; 95%CI:1.51-2.35) and the presence of a cytokine storm (aOR: 1.75; 95%CI:1.30-2.35).
Conclusions: Administration of IO was not associated with severe outcomes in patients with cancer and COVID-19, whereas pre-existing baseline immunosuppression appears to be independently associated with worse clinical outcomes including cytokine storm
Regular Expressions and Transducers over Alphabet-invariant and User-defined Labels
We are interested in regular expressions and transducers that represent word
relations in an alphabet-invariant way---for example, the set of all word pairs
u,v where v is a prefix of u independently of what the alphabet is. Current
software systems of formal language objects do not have a mechanism to define
such objects. We define transducers in which transition labels involve what we
call set specifications, some of which are alphabet invariant. In fact, we give
a more broad definition of automata-type objects, called labelled graphs, where
each transition label can be any string, as long as that string represents a
subset of a certain monoid. Then, the behaviour of the labelled graph is a
subset of that monoid. We do the same for regular expressions. We obtain
extensions of a few classic algorithmic constructions on ordinary regular
expressions and transducers at the broad level of labelled graphs and in such a
way that the computational efficiency of the extended constructions is not
sacrificed. For regular expressions with set specs we obtain the corresponding
partial derivative automata. For transducers with set specs we obtain further
algorithms that can be applied to questions about independent regular
languages, in particular the witness version of the independent property
satisfaction question
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Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation in Patients With Primary Immune Regulatory Disorders (PIRD): A Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium (PIDTC) Survey.
Primary Immune Regulatory Disorders (PIRD) are an expanding group of diseases caused by gene defects in several different immune pathways, such as regulatory T cell function. Patients with PIRD develop clinical manifestations associated with diminished and exaggerated immune responses. Management of these patients is complicated; oftentimes immunosuppressive therapies are insufficient, and patients may require hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) for treatment. Analysis of HCT data in PIRD patients have previously focused on a single gene defect. This study surveyed transplanted patients with a phenotypic clinical picture consistent with PIRD treated in 33 Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium centers and European centers. Our data showed that PIRD patients often had immunodeficient and autoimmune features affecting multiple organ systems. Transplantation resulted in resolution of disease manifestations in more than half of the patients with an overall 5-years survival of 67%. This study, the first to encompass disorders across the PIRD spectrum, highlights the need for further research in PIRD management
Increased CK5/CK8-Positive Intermediate Cells with Stromal Smooth Muscle Cell Atrophy in the Mice Lacking Prostate Epithelial Androgen Receptor
Results from tissue recombination experiments documented well that stromal androgen receptor (AR) plays essential roles in prostate development, but epithelial AR has little roles in prostate development. Using cell specific knockout AR strategy, we generated pes-ARKO mouse with knock out of AR only in the prostate epithelial cells and demonstrated that epithelial AR might also play important roles in the development of prostate gland. We found mice lacking the prostate epithelial AR have increased apoptosis in epithelial CK8-positive luminal cells and increased proliferation in epithelial CK5-positive basal cells. The consequences of these two contrasting results could then lead to the expansion of CK5/CK8-positive intermediate cells, accompanied by stromal atrophy and impaired ductal morphogenesis. Molecular mechanism dissection found AR target gene, TGF-ÎČ1, might play important roles in this epithelial AR-to-stromal morphogenesis modulation. Collectively, these results provided novel information relevant to epithelial AR functions in epithelial-stromal interactions during the development of normal prostate, and suggested AR could also function as suppressor in selective cells within prostate
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