Gracepike9941
8months vs. 11.1months, p<0.001) and PFS (10.4months vs. 5.5months, p<0.001) were significantly longer in patients with TFA-irAEs than in those without TFA-irAEs. In subgroup analysis of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism groups, similar trends were also obtained for both OS and PFS. After adjusting for potential confounding variables, patients with TFA-irAEs had a lower mortality risk (HR 0.334, 95%CI 0.196-0.571) than those without TFA-irAEs.
TFA-irAEs is associated with enhanced PD-1 inhibitor efficacy in advanced NSCLC patients and it may be a biomarker for antitumor immune response.
TFA-irAEs is associated with enhanced PD-1 inhibitor efficacy in advanced NSCLC patients and it may be a biomarker for antitumor immune response.A model for a nonspherical bubble in a compressible liquid under the coupling effect of ultrasound and electrostatic field was developed in this study. Selleckchem TPH104m The following assumptions are made (1) the bubble undergoes adiabatic oscillation; (2) the gravity of the liquid is negligible; (3) the bubble is insulating. If the speed of sound approaches infinity (c→∞), the equation set is reduced to the equation set for an incompressible liquid. We found that, under ultrasonic irradiation coupled with electric stress, a nonspherical bubble cannot oscillate steadily in the liquid. The bubble is bound to collapse during several cycles. The presence of electric stress reduces the surface tension at the bubble wall, which produces a larger maximum bubble-radius during the rarefaction cycle and a smaller minimum bubble-radius during the compression cycle. Consequently, during the collapse, both the gas pressure and the temperature in the bubble center increase substantially, if the bubble is exposed to both ultrasound and electrostatic field instead of ultrasound alone. In addition, the cavitation threshold of the bubble within an electrostatic field decreases significantly, compared to the bubble without an electrostatic field. In general, bubble cavitation occurs more easily and violently in the liquid after the introduction of an electrostatic field.
In the context of the pandemic, exploration on the association between insecurity and stress among university students is limited. The current study aims to investigate the parallel mediation role of hope and self-efficacy in the relationship between insecurity and stress among university students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
We employed a cross-sectional research design in a university by distributing questionnaires online. 5286 participants were recruited (mean age=19.65; SD=1.13). Items were from the Security Questionnaire, Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-21, and the Positive Psychology Capital (Psycap) Questionnaire (PPQ). Parallel mediation analysis was performed using PROCESS macro in SPSS.
The results indicate that insecurity predicted students' stress positively and that students with high-level perceived insecurity are more likely to perceive stress. Moreover, hope and self-efficacy mediated the relationship between insecurity and stress, indicating that hope and self-efficacy could buffer the negative effects of insecurity on stress.
This study examines the mediating model between insecurity and stress among Chinese university students. The generalizability of the findings in other regions remains to be explored. Additionally, the roles of other positive self-beliefs including optimism and resilience in relieving stress can be further explored in future research.
This research provides direct evidence of insecurity effects on stress among university students, enriching relevant theories in the field of stress. Moreover, this research suggests that enhancing positive self-beliefs such as hope, and self-efficacy helps to relieve students' stress during COVID-19.
This research provides direct evidence of insecurity effects on stress among university students, enriching relevant theories in the field of stress. Moreover, this research suggests that enhancing positive self-beliefs such as hope, and self-efficacy helps to relieve students' stress during COVID-19.
Integrating psychosocial interventions with mobile apps may increase treatment engagement among adolescents. We examined the user experience, uptake, and clinical effects of a mobile-enhanced family-focused therapy (FFT) among adolescents at risk for mood disorders.
We created a mobile app containing 12 lesson plans corresponding to content of weekly FFT sessions, with modules concerning mood management, family communication and problem-solving. We pilot tested the app in an open trial of FFT (12 sessions in 18 weeks) for adolescents who had active depressive or hypomanic symptoms, a parent with mood disorder, and at least one parent who expressed high levels of criticism. Teens and parents made daily and weekly ratings of youths' moods, amount of parent/offspring criticism, and practice of FFT psychoeducational, communication or problem-solving skills. Independent evaluators interviewed adolescents at baseline and every 9 weeks over 27 weeks to measure symptom trajectories.
Participants were adolescents (n=22; mean age 15.4 ± 1.8 years; 45.5% female) and their 34 parents. Completion of requested app assessment and skill practices averaged 46%-65% among adolescents and parents over 18 weeks of treatment. Adolescents showed significant improvement in clinician-rated depression scores over 27 weeks (Cohen's d=1.58, 95% CI, 0.83 to 2.32) and reported reductions in the amount of perceived criticism expressed by parents.
The uncontrolled design limits inferences about whether the mobile app augmented the effects of FFT on moods or family relationships.
Mobile applications may enhance users' responses to family therapy and provide clinicians with information regarding clinical status. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03913013.
Mobile applications may enhance users' responses to family therapy and provide clinicians with information regarding clinical status. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03913013.
Disturbed sleep and irregular sleep-wake patterns have been associated with poor outcomes in older adults. Sleep regularity however has not been studied in a sample with current or remitted major depression.
138 participants (63.8±8.6 years; n=27 current major depression, n=64 remitted, and n=47 healthy controls) were monitored using wrist-worn actigraphy. The Sleep Regularity Index (SRI), sleep-wake fragmentation and stability, sleep onset and offset timing, number of awakenings and measures from cosinor analysis were computed.
Compared with controls, older adults with current depression had lower SRI (p < 0.01), lower relative amplitude (p < 0.05), and higher activity during sleeping and post-midnight hours (p < 0.05). Older adults with remitted depression displayed lower activity during the day (p < 0.05), showed reduced average activity and lower amplitude than controls. Total sleep time, sleep timing, and number of awakenings did not differ between groups. All groups differed significantly in self-reported sleep quality and depression severity.