Persistent viremia after clinical or subclinical hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is believed to occur in patients with chronic hepatitis C, but little is known about the duration of HCV replication in patients with acute hepatitis who have recovered or the relation of HCV viremia with the kinetics of antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV). We tested HCV-RNA and anti-HCV in serial serum samples from 41 patients with posttransfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis, followed for an average of 6 years after transfusion. Serum HCV-RNA was measured by nested polymerase chain reaction, which used primers from the 5' untranslated region of the HCV genome. Anti-HCV were tested with first- and second-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA 1 and ELISA 2), and with a second-generation recombinant immunoblot assay. Of the 41 patients, 10 recovered and 31 progressed to chronic liver disease. HCV-RNA was detected in serum before or simultaneously with the onset of hepatitis in all cases, and lasted between 2 and 6 weeks in 5 of the 10 patients who recovered, whereas it persisted for the entire follow-up period in every case with chronic hepatitis and in the remaining 5 patients with self-limiting hepatitis. Anti-HCV were detected with ELISA 2 in the first serum sample, with raised serum transaminases in 57% of patients, but in only 6% with ELISA 1. In the sample obtained 1 month after the onset of hepatitis, anti-HCV were detected with ELISA 2 in 94% of patients, but in 34% with the ELISA 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Objective To compare the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with acute heart failure (AHF) according to clinical profiles based on congestion and perfusion determined in the emergency department (ED). Methods and results Overall, 11 261 unselected AHF patients from 41 Spanish EDs were classified according to perfusion (normoperfusion = warm; hypoperfusion = cold) and congestion (not = dry; yes = wet). Baseline and decompensation characteristics were recorded as were the main wards to which patients were admitted. The primary outcome was 1‐year all‐cause mortality; secondary outcomes were need for hospitalisation during the index AHF event, in‐hospital all‐cause mortality, prolonged hospitalisation, 7‐day post‐discharge ED revisit for AHF and 30‐day post‐discharge rehospitalisation for AHF. A total of 8558 patients (76.0%) were warm + wet, 1929 (17.1%) cold + wet, 675 (6.0%) warm + dry, and 99 (0.9%) cold + dry; hypoperfused (cold) patients were more frequently admitted to intensive care units and geriatrics departments, and warm + wet patients were discharged home without admission. The four phenotypes differed in most of the baseline and decompensation characteristics. The 1‐year mortality was 30.8%, and compared to warm + dry, the adjusted hazard ratios were significantly increased for cold + wet (1.660; 95% confidence interval 1.400–1.968) and cold + dry (1.672; 95% confidence interval 1.189–2.351). Hypoperfused (cold) phenotypes also showed higher rates of index episode hospitalisation and in‐hospital mortality, while congestive (wet) phenotypes had a higher risk of prolonged hospitalisation but decreased risk of rehospitalisation. No differences were observed among phenotypes in ED revisit risk. Conclusions Bedside clinical evaluation of congestion and perfusion of AHF patients upon ED arrival and classification according to phenotypic profiles proposed by the latest European Society of Cardiology guidelines provide useful complementary information and help to rapidly predict patient outcomes shortly after ED patient arrival.
Early T-cell precursor (ETP) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), was first identified within cases of childhood T-ALL based on its unique immunophenotypic and genetic features of limited (early) T-cell differentiation associated with (some) myeloid and stem cell features. 1 Thus ETP-ALL blasts express CD7, dim CD5 (<75% positive cells), in the absence of CD1a and CD8, and positivity for ≥1 myeloid/stem cell related markers (i.e., CD34, CD13 or CD33). 1,2 In turn, ETP-ALL frequently shows myeloid-associated gene alterations such as FLT3, NRAS/KRAS, DNMT3A, IDH1 and IDH2 mutations, 3,4 with lower frequencies of other T-ALL-associated mutations (e.g., NOTCH1 and CDKN2A/B gene mutations). 5,6 The World Health Organization (WHO) 2016 classification of ALL included ETP-ALL for the first time, as a provisional entity, 7 but it failed to establish robust diagnostic criteria. Thus, after the first immunophenotypic characterization of ETP-ALL by Coustan-Smith et al. 1 the proposed criteria did not allow identification of all ETP-ALL cases as detected by gene expression profiling. 2 In addition, the "partial CD5 expression" criterion had a negative impact on the reproducibility of ETP-ALL diagnoses because of the lack of standardization of the method used for its assessment. Because of this, Zuubier et al. proposed refined immunophenotypic criteria by excluding CD5 expression while adding negativity for CD4. 2 From the clinical point of view early studies based on limited numbers of pediatric patients indicated that ETP-ALL was associated with a very poor outcome. 1,8,9 More recent data, based on larger series of children treated with more intensive therapy, showed no significant differences in outcome for ETP-ALL vs. other T-ALL cases. 10 In contrast, limited data have been reported for adult ETP-ALL, with conflicting results. 11,12 In one study, adult ETP-ALL was associated with a worse prognosis following different frontline chemotherapy schedules. 11 The
The need for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) in adults with Philadelphia chromosome-negative (Ph-neg) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with high-risk (HR) features and adequate measurable residual disease (MRD) clearance remains unclear. The aim of the ALL-HR-11 trial was to evaluate the outcomes of HR Ph-neg adult ALL patients following chemotherapy or allo-HSCT administered based on end-induction and consolidation MRD levels. Patients aged 15-60 years (y) with HR-ALL in complete response (CR) and MRD levels (centrally assessed by 8-color flow cytometry) <0.1% after induction and <0.01% after early consolidation, were assigned to receive delayed consolidation and maintenance therapy up to 2y in CR. The remaining patients were allocated to allo-HSCT. CR was attained in 315/348 patients (91%), with MRD <0.1% after induction in 220/289 patients (76%). By intention-to treat, 218 patients were assigned to chemotherapy and 106 to allo-HSCT. The 5-year (±95%CI) cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR), overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) probabilities for the whole series were 43%±7%, 49%±7% and 40±6%, respectively, with CIR and OS rates of 45±8% and 59±9% for patients assigned to chemotherapy and of 40±12% and 38±11% for those assigned to allo-HSCT, respectively. Our results show that avoiding allo-HSCT does not hamper the outcomes of HR Ph-neg adult ALL patients up to 60y with adequate MRD response after induction and consolidation. Better post-remission alternative therapies are especially needed for patients with poor MRD clearance. ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01540812)
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