Leukemia comprises a group of hematological malignancies responsible for 8% of all cancers and is the most common cancer in children. Despite significant improvements in leukemia treatment, the efficacy of conventional chemotherapeutic agents is low and the disease carries a poor prognosis with frequent relapses and high mortality. Curcumin is a yellow polyphenol compound with diverse pharmacological actions including anticancer, antioxidant, antidiabetic, anti‐inflammatory, immunomodulatory, hepatoprotective, lipid‐regulating, antidepressant, and antiarthritic. Many cellular and experimental studies have reported the benefits of curcumin in treating leukemia. Curcumin's anticancer effects are exerted via various mechanisms. Here, we review the effects of curcumin on various types of leukemia whilst considering its mechanisms of action.
Introduction: One of the most important strategies to control COVID-19 pandemic is vaccination. Effective vaccination coverage is necessary to control this pandemic. Therefore, in this study we investigated acceptance of COVID-19 vaccine and associated factors among Iranian population. Methods: A cross-sectional study conducted through Pors Line in South Khorasan Province of Iran. 1043 people participated in this study. Results were analyzed with SPSS software version 13. Results: 85.2% of the participants wanted to receive the vaccine. Vaccine acceptance was higher in participants that were over 41 years old. Moreover, rate of vaccine acceptance was higher in men than women. Major concern about vaccination was fear of its side effects. Vaccine acceptance increased with increasing education level. Conclusion: Results of this study showed that one of the most important reasons for vaccine rejection is the fear of vaccine side effects.
Neutropenia congenita grave (SCN) is a rare disease with a genetically and clinically heterogeneous nature, usually diagnosed in childhood, with an elevated risk of infections such as otitis, skin infections, pneumonia, deep abscesses, and septicemia. Patients with SCN also have an increased risk of leukemia, and mutations in the ELANE and the HAX1 genes have been observed in those patients. This study was conducted to genetically screen six Iranian families with SCN who have at least one affected person. In the first step, all exons and intron boundaries of ELANE and HAX1 genes were sequenced in probands. Cases with no pathogenic mutations were tested through whole-exome sequencing (WES). Analysis showed five different variants in ELANE (c.377 C>T), HAX1 (c.130_131 insA), HYOU1 (c.69 G>C and c.2744 G>A) and SHOC2 (c.4 A>G) genes in four families. We found that two out of six families had mutations in ELANE and HAX1 genes. Moreover, we found two novel mutations at the HYOU1 gene that had not previously been reported, as well as a pathogenic mutation at SHOC2 with multiple phenotypes, that will contribute to determining the genetic basis for SCN. Our study revealed that WES could help diagnose SCN, improve the classification of neutropenia, and rule out other immunodeficiencies such as autoimmune neutropenia, primary immunodeficiency diseases, and inherited bone marrow failure syndromes.
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