653 research outputs found
Learning from the parallel field of terrorism studies.
Comments on an article by T. W. Briggs and J. W. Pollard (see record 2020-26206-005). Briggs and Pollard make a convincing case for the advancement of computational modeling and simulation of mass violence for threat assessment and management. The purpose of this commentary is to look into the analogous study of terrorism to pinpoint recent areas of advancement. We narrow our focus to three core areas, two of which heavily overlap with core areas identified by Briggs and Pollard: (a) computational linguistic approaches, (b) spatial modeling, and (c) network based designs. Historically, the fields of both (a) threat assessment and management and (b) terrorism studies grew in silos. The aim here is for a much greater alignment in research agendas moving forward. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved
Anthracycline-trastuzumab regimens for HER2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer: current experience and future strategies
Anthracycline-trastuzumab-containing regimens demonstrate significant clinical activity in human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive breast cancer; however, the utility of this strategy is limited by unacceptably high rates of significant cardiotoxicity, particularly with concurrent administration. Anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity is thought to be mediated primarily through increased myocardial oxidative stress, modified partly by the activity of neuregulins. Trastuzumab-induced cardiotoxicity is thought to be mediated by the ErbB/neuregulin system, with exposure to trastuzumab partly blocking the protective effect of neuregulins on the myocardium. As a result, trastuzumab increases the risk of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity. Several strategies have been adopted in attempts to minimize cardiotoxicity, including patient selection on the basis of preexisting cardiac risk, monitoring of cardiac function during treatment, and early management of cardiac dysfunction. The use of less cardiotoxic anthracyclines may be one strategy to lessen the risk of cardiotoxicity. Liposomal doxorubicin products offer similar efficacy compared with conventional doxorubicin, with significantly less cardiotoxicity, and have been successfully used in combination with trastuzumab in the metastatic and neo-adjuvant setting. Clinical trials are currently underway to assess the safety of pegylated liposomal doxorubicin during concurrent administration with trastuzumab compared with standard sequential treatment using conventional doxorubicin in the adjuvant settin
Glycoprotein Nonmetastatic Melanoma Protein B as Potential Imaging Marker in Posttherapeutic Metastatic Head and Neck Cancer
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate expression of potential molecular imaging targets epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B (GPNMB), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in lymph nodes (LNs) with or without head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) metastases after (chemo)radiation. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study comparing receptor expression in paired lymph nodes after initial treatment. SETTING: A tertiary referral hospital. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Salvage neck dissection specimens of 40 patients treated with (chemo)radiation were selected. LNs that contained viable tumor, reactive changes after initial treatment, and normal LNs were analyzed using immunohistochemically determined H-scores and by calculating sensitivity and specificity rates and positive/negative predictive values (PPVs/NPVs). RESULTS: EGFR expression was found in 86% and GPNMB expression in 100% of the LNs with viable tumor. VEGF expression was present in all lymph node types. For EGFR, the sensitivity rate was 86%, and specificity rate was 81%. For GPNMB, these were 100% and 75%, respectively. PPV of EGFR was 61.8% and NPV was 98.2%. These were 56.4% and 100% for GPNMB, respectively. CONCLUSION: In residual or recurrent HNSCC lymph node metastases, both EGFR and GPNMB show tumor-specific expression in immunohistochemistry, which may prove useful in future molecular imaging in salvage neck dissections. Immunohistochemically detected VEGF expression indicates that this target is not feasible for imaging purposes in salvage surgery. Therefore, GPNMB could be a new potential imaging target showing comparable results to EGFR in immunohistochemistry
Strain Distribution During Growth of Ge/Si(001) and the Effect of Surfactant Layers
Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction has been employed to determine directly the distribution of strain in the plane of the interface during deposition of Ge onto Si(001). The corresponding strain distribution has also been deduced for a relaxed island whose atomic structure has been determined by molecular dynamics. The results illustrate the central role of elastic deformation of islands in the initial stage of strain relief. The results are also compared with those for growth with a Sb surfactant layer which suppresses island formation. An investigation of surfactant-like behaviour is also presented for homoepitaxial growth of Ag on Ag(111), where sub-monolayer coverages of Sb promote a layer-by-layer growth mode over a wide temperature range
Cortactin expression assessment improves patient selection for a watchful waiting strategy in pT1cN0-staged oral squamous cell carcinomas with a tumor infiltration depth below 4 mm
BACKGROUND: In this feasibility study we aimed to evaluate the value of previously reported molecular tumor biomarkers associated with lymph node metastasis in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) to optimize neck strategy selection criteria. METHODS: The association between expression of cortactin, cyclin D1, FADD, RAB25, and S100A9 and sentinel lymph node status was evaluated in a series of 87 (cT1‐2N0) patients with OSCC treated with primary resection and SLNB procedure. RESULTS: Tumor infiltration depth and tumor pattern of invasion were independent prognostic markers for SLN status, while none of the tumor makers showed a better prognostic value to replace SLNB as neck staging technique in the total cohort. However, in the subgroup of patients with pT1N0 OSCC, cortactin expression (OR 16.0, 95%CI 2.0–127.9) was associated with SLN classification. CONCLUSIONS: Expression of cortactin is a promising immunohistochemical tumor marker to identify patients at low risk that may not benefit from SLNB or END
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