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McGarry Boykin posted an update 1 week, 1 day ago
This article is one of the few in the Peruvian literature, constituting a contribution to the knowledge of the disease and its management in pediatrics.BACKGROUND Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is a life-threatening digestive tract malignancy with no known curative treatment. This study aimed to investigate the antineoplastic effects of omipalisib and its underlying molecular mechanisms in ESCC using a high throughput screen. MATERIAL AND METHODS MTT assay and clone formation were used to determine cell viability and proliferation. Flow cytometry was conducted to detect cell cycle distribution and apoptosis. Global gene expression and mRNA expression levels were determined by RNA sequencing and real-time PCR, respectively. Protein expression was evaluated in the 4 ESCC cell lines by Western blot analysis. Finally, a xenograft nude mouse model was used to evaluate the effect of omipalisib on tumor growth in vivo. RESULTS In the pilot screening of a 1404-compound library, we demonstrated that omipalisib markedly inhibited cell proliferation in a panel of ESCC cell lines. SOP1812 chemical structure Mechanistically, omipalisib induced G₀/G₁ cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. RNA-seq, KEGG, and GSEA analyses revealed that the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway is the prominent target of omipalisib in ESCC cells. Treatment with omipalisib decreased expression of p-AKT, p-4EBP1, p-p70S6K, p-S6, and p-ERK, therefore disrupting the activation of PI3K/AKT/mTOR and ERK signaling. In the nude mouse xenograft model, omipalisib significantly suppressed the tumor growth in ESCC tumor-bearing mice without obvious adverse effects. CONCLUSIONS Omipalisib inhibited the proliferation and growth of ESCC by disrupting PI3K/AKT/mTOR and ERK signaling. The present study supports the rationale for using omipalisib as a therapeutic approach in ESCC patients. Further clinical studies are needed.BACKGROUND Pneumonia caused by coronavirus originated in Wuhan, China in late 2019 and has spread around the world, becoming a pandemic. Many patients deteriorate rapidly and require intubation and mechanical ventilation, which is causing the collapse of healthcare systems in many countries. Coronavirus infection is associated with extensive lung inflammation and microvascular thrombosis, which can result in hypoxia. It can also cause severe and lasting harm in other organs, including the heart and kidneys. At present, there is no proven and efficacious treatment for this new disease. Consequently, there is a growing tendency to use novel methods. Ozone therapy consists of administration of a mixture of oxygen and ozone (a molecule consisting of 3 oxygen atoms). The potential benefits of this therapy include reduced tissue hypoxia, decreased hypercoagulability, renal and heart protection, modulated immune function, improved phagocytic function, and impaired viral replication. CASE REPORT We report rapidly improved hypoxia with associated decreases in inflammatory markers and D-dimer immediately after 1-4 sessions of oxygen-ozone (O₂-O₃) therapy in 3 patients with COVID-19 pneumonia who presented with respiratory failure. Invasive mechanical ventilation was not required in these 3 patients. All patients were discharged home on days 3-4 after O₂-O₃ therapy. CONCLUSIONS O₂-O₃ therapy appears to be an effective therapy for COVID-19 patients with severe respiratory failure. Large controlled clinical trials are required to study the efficacy and safety of using O₂-O₃ therapy compared with the standard supportive case in patients with COVID-19 in terms of the need for invasive ventilation and length of hospital and intensive care unit stays.
Several studies have reported about the performance of C-choline-PET/computed tomography (CT) (choline) in patients with biochemical recurrent (BCR) prostate cancer, but there is a lack of information regarding negative choline in the same clinical setting. Our aim was to retrospectively analyse negative choline in a cohort of BCR-patients with high prostate-specific antigen (PSA).
We retrospectively analysed all choline-scans performed at two high-volume imaging centres between 2005 and 2018, selecting those of interest according to the following inclusion criteria (1) proven prostate cancer treated either with radical prostatectomy or primary external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), (2) BCR after radical prostatectomy or EBRT, (3) PSA serum values >20 ng/mL at the time of scan and (4) scan reported as negative for active disease. Overall, among 5792 scans performed for BCR-prostate cancer, 14 matched the inclusion criteria and were classified as follows 5/14(36%) inaccurate reports, 3/14(21%) questionable underestimation of positive findings, originally described as unclear, 6/14(43%) negatives. Choline showed a high detection rate in BCR-prostate cancer patients with PSA >20 ng/mL.
Although negative reports can be found in this clinical setting, in our review various disease-relevant findings were identified in more than half of the cases originally reported as negative warranting a double reading in such cases to avoid false-negative reports.
Although negative reports can be found in this clinical setting, in our review various disease-relevant findings were identified in more than half of the cases originally reported as negative warranting a double reading in such cases to avoid false-negative reports.The efficacy of adoptive cellular immunotherapy against cancer cells is limited due to the presence of immunosuppressive cells within the solid tumor microenvironment. The upregulation of certain coinhibitory receptors may lead to exhaustion of the immune effector cells. T-cell immunoglobulin and immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif domain (TIGIT) is an immune inhibitory receptor expressed by regulatory T cells and activated T cells and natural killer cells. The aim of this study was to determine the immunosuppressive effects of CD155/TIGIT signaling on CD8 T cells of adoptive cellular immunotherapy in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Our studies found that CD155 was overexpressed in HCC, and CD155 HCC cells upregulated TIGIT on CD8 T cells, which decreased the secretion of interferon-γ, tumor necrosis factor-α, and interleukin-17A and increased that of interleukin-10 from the effector cells. However, TIGIT blockade or CD155-knockdown reversed the inhibitory effect of HCC cells on CD8 T-cell effector function.