Pagerohde8958
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertion (ex20 ins) mutations are generally associated with de novo resistance to first- or second-generation EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the real efficacy of osimertinib for this subset remains elusive. We performed this study to investigate the real efficacy of osimertinib for Chinese advanced NSCLC patients harboring EGFR ex20 ins mutations.
We retrospectively collected data of metastatic NSCLC patients with EGFR ex20 ins mutations who were treated with osimertinib 80 mg or 160 mg once daily in our center from June 2017 to May 2020. Progression-free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) were assessed.
A total of 62 cases with EGFR ex20 ins mutations were included, and the major insertion variant was D770_N771insSVD and V769_D770insASV (45.1 %). Concurrent TP53 mutation was most commonly observed (59.7 %). Four patients showed partial response, 29 cases with stablertion variant A763_Y764insFQEA and D770delinsGY might better respond to osimertinib than other ex20 ins subtypes. Osimertinib either 80 mg or 160 mg once daily showed less activity in Chinese NSCLC patients harboring diverse EGFR ex20 ins mutations.
This study explored providers' perspectives and behavior regarding respectful maternity care, including knowledge, attitudes, and practices.
Mixed-methods cross-sectional study combining quantitative survey data, qualitative interviews, and observations of labor and delivery across four health facilities SETTING Government health facilities in rural northern Ghana PARTICIPANTS 43 front-line maternity care providers completed a survey of practice patterns before a quality of care training. We then used purposive and convenience sampling to recruit a sub-sample for in-depth interviews (N=17), and convenience sampling and self-selection to observe approximately half (N=8) providing clinical care.
We calculated descriptive statistics from quantitative data and used the framework approach for qualitative analysis. Observational data were examined using the CHANGE Project's Assessment Tools for Caring Providers. We utilized split frame methodology to make comparisons across data sources. Quantitative survey ruse were present.
Further research and programmatic efforts are needed to address the gap between knowledge and behavior.
Further research and programmatic efforts are needed to address the gap between knowledge and behavior.Kiwifruit can trigger allergic reactions that can lead to death, causing public health concerns worldwide. In the present study, we treated kiwifruit samples with high-intensity ultrasound (20 kHz, 400 W, 50% duty cycle) for 0 to 16 min to evaluate its effect on the IgE binding capacity of kiwifruit allergen Act d 2, secondary structure and in-vitro digestibility of kiwifruit proteins. The changes in the protein solubility and microstructures of kiwifruit were also analyzed. The results showed that treatment with powerful ultrasound caused a significant disruption in the microstructure of kiwifruit tissues, leading to the changes in the secondary structures of proteins, including a loss of alpha-helixes and an increase in beta-sheet structures. These structural changes were due to the ultrasound treatment, especially 16 min of treatment, resulted in a 50% reduction in Act d 2 allergen content and significantly improved in-vitro digestibility up to 62% from the initial level of 35%. Furthermore, the solubility of the total proteins present in kiwifruit samples was significantly decreased by 20% after 16-min ultrasound processing. The results of this work showed that high-intensity ultrasound treatment has a potential application in reducing the allergenicity of kiwifruit or related products.Reward and punishment processing are subject to substantial developmental changes during youth. However, little is known about the neurophysiological correlates that are associated with these developmental changes, particularly with regard to both anticipatory and outcome processing stages. Thus, the aim of this study was to address this research gap in a sample of typically developing children and adolescents. Fifty-four children and adolescents (8-18 years) performed a Monetary Incentive Delay Task comprising a monetary reward and punishment condition. Using event-related brain potential recordings, the cue-P3 and the stimulus-preceding negativity (SPN) were analyzed during the anticipation phase, while the Reward Positivity and the feedback-P3 were analyzed during the outcome phase. When anticipating monetary loss or no gain, SPN amplitude in the right hemisphere decreased with age. Moreover, exploratory analyses revealed a decrease in feedback-P3 amplitudes in response to monetary loss with increasing age. No other group differences were observed. Age-related changes in the SPN and fP3 component suggest that sensitivity to negative outcomes decreases from childhood to late adolescence, supporting the notion that adolescence is associated with reduced harm-avoidance. Longitudinal research including young adults is needed to substantiate our findings and its clinical implications regarding disturbed developmental trajectories in psychiatric populations.Rapid and widespread changes in brain anatomy and physiology in the first five years of life present substantial challenges for developmental structural, functional, and diffusion MRI studies. One persistent challenge is that methods best suited to earlier developmental stages are suboptimal for later stages, which engenders a trade-off between using different, but age-appropriate, methods for different developmental stages or identical methods across stages. Both options have potential benefits, but also biases, as pipelines for each developmental stage can be matched on methods or the age-appropriateness of methods, but not both. This review describes the data acquisition, processing, and analysis challenges that introduce these potential biases and attempts to elucidate decisions and make recommendations that would optimize developmental comparisons.Previous studies have shown that reading skill in 3- to 6-year-old children is related to the automatic activation of the posterior left ventral occipitotemporal cortex (vOT) during spoken language processing, whereas 8- to 15-year-old children and adult readers activate the anterior vOT. However, it is unknown how children who are between these two age groups automatically activate orthographic representations in vOT for spoken language. In the current study, we recruited 153 7- to 8-year-old children to fill the age gap from previous studies. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we measured children's reading-related skills and brain activity during an auditory phonological task with both a small (i.e. onset) and a large (i.e. rhyme) grain size condition. We found that letter fluency, but not reading accuracy, was correlated with activation in the anterior vOT for the rhyme condition. There were no reading-related skill correlations for the posterior vOT or for activation during the onset condition in this age group. Our findings reveal that automatic activation in the anterior vOT during spoken language processing already occurs in higher skilled 7- to 8-year-old children. In addition, increases in naming automaticity is the primary determinant of the engagement of vOT during phonological awareness tasks.Quercetin-loaded microcapsules (QLM) promote controlled release and higher bioavailability of quercetin, an antioxidant and neuroprotective agent. We evaluated the antioxidant effect of QLM on enteric innervation and in the oxidative status of the ileum of diabetic rats. LDN-212854 molecular weight Wistar adult rats (Rattus norvegicus) were used in six groups containing normoglycemic (N), diabetic (D) and either normoglycemic or diabetic groups treated with QLM at a dose of 10 mg/kg (NQ10 and DQ10, respectively) or 100 mg/kg (NQ100 and DQ100, respectively). DQ10 e DQ100 did not prevent overall neuronal loss in the total and cholinergic populations. Nitrergic population showed differences regarding the treatments DQ10 preserved neurons in the nitrergic population whilst DQ100 increased nitrergic loss. Evaluation of the redox status showed pro-oxidant effects in NQ100 by t-butyl-induced chemiluminescence analysis. We observed a reduction in the carbonylic content and an increase of low molecular weight antioxidants for DQ10 e DQ100. Therefore, QLM treatment at a dose of 10 mg/kg acted positively on nitrergic neurons reducing oxidative damage induced by diabetes.
Hazardous drinking is a prevalent form of alcohol misuse. Past research has examined emotion regulation difficulties as a risk factor for hazardous drinking; however, the majority of prior studies have focused on regulation of negative emotions. Recent work has implicated difficulties regulating positive emotions in relation to alcohol misuse, yet, it is largely unknown if difficulties regulating positive emotions are significantly related to alcohol misuse outcomes after accounting for difficulties regulating negative emotions.
A racially diverse sample of hazardous drinkers were recruited from a university setting (75% female, M
=22.1, SD
=4.0) to participate in a treatment study. Data from baseline was used in the current study. Structural equation modeling was used to evaluate relations between difficulties regulating positive and negative emotions and alcohol problems both directly and indirectly via coping motives.
After controlling for sex, age, and levels of negative and positive affect, positn a common pathway to experiencing alcohol-related problems. Notably, difficulties regulating positive emotions appear to offer incremental, explanatory value over and above difficulties regulating negative emotions. Such findings offer important clinical and theoretical implications.
Young adults' e-cigarette use is associated with perceptions that e-cigarettes are less harmful or addictive than cigarettes, socially acceptable, and appealing. This study developed and tested vaping educational messages addressing these factors 1) Harm Perceptions, 2) Addictiveness, 3) Social Use, and 4) Flavors.
Two message trials were conducted in U.S. Amazon Mechanical Turk workers aged 18-24 using a 2 (content addiction, harm)×3 (theme alone, + flavors, + social) design with multiple messages in each of the six categories. Participants were assigned to view a random subset of messages and report on likeability and perceived message effectiveness (PME). Phase 1 (n=200) tested 33 messages and 32 images. Phase 2 (n=769) tested combinations of Phase 1's 24 most effective messages with 6 images rated most likeable or effective. Linear mixed effects models assessed the effect of content, theme, image, and their interactions on message response.
In both trials, most participants were past 30-day tobacco users. Harm content messages produced higher PME ratings than addiction content messages, and flavor theme messages were correlated with higher likeability scores than "content alone" theme messages. In Phase 2, flavor and social message themes decreased the PME of harm messages. There was no effect of images on either outcome controlling for the independent or interaction effects of content, theme, and image.
Messages conveying the harms of vaping may be best for reducing vaping in young adult tobacco users; flavor and social themes may diminish their effectiveness.
Messages conveying the harms of vaping may be best for reducing vaping in young adult tobacco users; flavor and social themes may diminish their effectiveness.