12 research outputs found

    Regenerating normal B-cell precursors during and after treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: Implications for monitoring of minimal residual disease

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    We studied 57 childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) patients who remained in continuous complete remission after treatment according to the Dutch Childhood Leukaemia Study Group ALL-8 protocols. The patients were monitored at 18 time points during and after treatment [640 bone marrow (BM) and 600 blood samples] by use of cytomorphology and immunophenotyping for the expression of TdT, CD34, CD10 and CD19. Additionally, 60 BM follow-up samples from six patients were subjected to clonality assessment via heteroduplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of immunoglobulin VH-JH gene rearrangements. We observed substantial expansions of normal precursor B cells in regenerating BM not only after maintenance therapy but also during treatment. At the end of the 2-week intervals after consolidation and reinduction treatment, B-cell-lineage regeneration was observed in BM with a large fraction of immature CD34+/TdT+ B cells. In contrast, in regenerating BM after cessation of maintenance treatment, the more mature CD19+/CD10+ B cells were significantly increased, but the fraction of immature CD34+/TdT+ B cells

    Objective comparison of particle tracking methods

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    Particle tracking is of key importance for quantitative analysis of intracellular dynamic processes from time-lapse microscopy image data. Because manually detecting and following large numbers of individual particles is not feasible, automated computational methods have been developed for these tasks by many groups. Aiming to perform an objective comparison of methods, we gathered the community and organized an open competition in which participating teams applied their own methods independently to a commonly defined data set including diverse scenarios. Performance was assessed using commonly defined measures. Although no single method performed best across all scenarios, the results revealed clear differences between the various approaches, leading to notable practical conclusions for users and developers

    Measuring local autonomy: A decision-making approach

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    In studies on central-local relations it is common to assess local autonomy in a deductive way. The extent of local autonomy is determined by measuring the central legal and financial competence, after which the remaining room for local decision-making is determined. The outcome of this indirect method is that the autonomy of local government tends to be systematically underestimated. As an alternative this paper introduces a decision-making approach in which local decisions are systematically weighed on three dimensions: Agenda setting, freedom in choices, and dependency. Using Dutch data, the authors come to the conclusion that a locally oriented perspective leads to a more accurate and positive judgement of the autonomy of local government. © 2006 Taylor & Francis
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