Thursday, July 28, 2022

Facial nerve palsy: Narrative review on the importance of the eye and its assessment

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

Abstract

New solutions are emerging that address specific facial regions in facial nerve palsy (FNP). However the most dreaded consequence of FNP is paralytic lagophthalmos threatening the eye. A way to prioritize these regions is thus required. A review of the literature is conduced to capture the current concepts in evaluating FNP. Overall, patients are assessed from three perspectives: from the clinician's perspective using validated clinician-based grading instruments, from patient's perspective based on FNP-specific patient-reported outcome measures, and from the perspective of the layperson. The existing tools however provide limited information regarding the relative importance of different regions of the face. The eye appears to be an area of great concern for the patient where most surgical therapies are directed at. Addressing ocular problems in FNP carry a high priority but this is not clearly reflected by the standard systems.

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STATIN USE MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH A LOWER RISK OF INVASIVE ASPERGILLOSIS IN LUNG TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
Abstract
Background
Statins are competitive inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase that catalyses HMG-CoA conversion to mevalonate, a process involved in synthesizing cholesterol in humans and ergosterol in fungi. The effect of statin use on the risk of development of invasive aspergillosis (IA) in lung transplant recipients (LTRs) is not well documented.
Methods
This retrospective study included LTRs from 2010 to 2017 who were followed for one-year post-transplant. Proven or probable IA was diagnosed as per ISHLT criteria. We performed a multivariable Cox proportional hazards model of the association between IA and statin use (minimum of two weeks duration prior to IA), adjusting for other known IA risk factors.
Results
We identified 785 LTRs, 44% female, mean age 53 years old, the most common underlying disease being pulmonary fibrosis (23.8%). 451 LTRs (57%) received statins post-transplant, atorvastatin was the most commonly used statin (68%). The mean duration of statins post-transplant was 347 days (IQR: 305 to 346). 55 (7%) LTRs developed IA in the first-year post-transplant. Out of these 55 LTRs, 9 (16.3%) had received statin before developing IA. In multivariable analysis, statin use was independently associated with a lower risk of IA (p = 0.002, SHR 0.30, CI 95% 0.14-0.64). Statin use was also associated with a lower incidence of post-transplant Aspergillus colonization, 114 (34%) in the no statin group vs. 123 (27%) in the statin group (p = 0.038).
Conclusions
The use of statin for a minimum of two weeks during the first-year post-transplant was associated with a 70% risk reduction of IA in LTRs.
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Cross-platform analysis reveals cellular and molecular landscape of glioblastoma invasion

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
Abstract
Background
Improved treatment of glioblastoma (GBM) needs to address tumor invasion, a hallmark of the disease that remains poorly understood. In this study, we profiled GBM invasion through integrative analysis of histological and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data from ten patients.
Methods
Human histology samples, patient-derived xenograft mouse histology samples, and scRNA-seq data were collected from ten GBM patients. Tumor invasion was characterized and quantified at the phenotypic level using H&E and Ki-67 histology stains. Crystallin alpha B (CRYAB) and CD44 were identified as regulators of tumor invasion from scRNA-seq transcriptomic data and validated in vitro, in vivo, and in a mouse GBM resection model.
Results
At the cellular level, we found that invasive GBM are less dense and proliferative than their non-invasive counterparts. At the molecular level, we identified unique transcriptomic features that significantly contribute to GBM invasion. Specifically, we found that CRYAB significantly contributes to post-operative recurrence and is highly co-expressed with CD44 in invasive GBM samples.
Conclusions
Collectively, our analysis identifies differentially expressed features between invasive and nodular GBM, and describes a novel relationship between CRYAB and CD44 that contributes to tumor invasiveness, establishing a cellular and molecular landscape of GBM invasion.
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Genetic predisposition & evolutionary traces of pediatric cancer risk: A prospective 5-year population-based genome sequencing study of children with CNS tumors

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader
Abstract
Background
The etiology of central nervous system (CNS) tumors in children is largely unknown and population-based studies of genetic predisposition are lacking.
Methods
In this prospective, population-based study, we performed germline whole-genome sequencing in 128 children with CNS tumors, supplemented by a systematic pedigree analysis covering 3,543 close relatives.
Results
Thirteen children (10%) harbored pathogenic variants in known cancer genes. These children were more likely to have medulloblastoma (OR 5.9, CI 1.6-21.2) and develop metasynchronous CNS tumors (p=0.01). Similar carrier frequencies were seen among children with low-grade glioma (12.8%) and high-grade tumors (12.2%). Next, considering the high mortality of childhood CNS tumors throughout most of human evolution, we explored known pediatric-onset cancer genes, showing that they are more evolutionarily constrained than genes associated with risk of adult-onset malignancies (p=5e-4) and all other genes (p=5e-17). Based on this observation, we expanded our analysis to 2 986 genes exhibiting high evolutionary constraint in 141 456 humans. This analysis identified eight directly causative loss-of-functions variants, and showed a dose-response association between degree of constraint and likelihood of pathogenicity - raising the question of the role of other highly constrained gene alterations detected.
Conclusions
∽10% of pediatric CNS tumors can be attributed to rare variants in known cancer genes. Genes associated with high risk of childhood cancer show evolutionary evidence of constraint.
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