Summary Purpose To determine the effect of seizure focus location within the left hemisphere on the expression of regional language dominance. Methods In this cross sectional study we investigated 90 patients (mean age 23.3±12.9 years) with left hemisphere focal epilepsy (mean age onset 11.7 ±8.3 years). 18 patients had a frontal lobe focus, 72 temporal lobe focus (43 mesial; 29 neocortical). Subjects performed an auditory word definition language paradigm using 3T BOLD EPI fMRI. Data was analyzed in SPM2. Regional laterality indices (LI) for inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), and Wernicke’s area (WA), were calculated using a bootstrap method. Categorical language dominance and mean LI were analyzed. Key Findings Mean WA LI was lower for subjects with a mesial temporal focus compared to a frontal focus (p=0.04). There was a greater proportion of atypical language in WA for subjects with a mesial temporal focus compared to a frontal focus (χ2=4.37, p=0.04). WA LI did not differ for subjects with a neocortical focus compared to a mesial focus or a frontal focus. Mean IFG LI and proportion of atypical language in IFG were similar across seizure focus groups. Age and age of onset were not correlated with mean laterality in WA or IFG. Epilepsy duration tended to be negatively correlated with WA LI (r=−0.18, p=0.10), but not IFG LI. Significance Temporal lobe foci have wide-ranging effects on the distributed language system. In contrast, the effects of a frontal lobe focus appear restricted to anterior rather than posterior language processing areas.
Targeting solid tumors with adoptive cell therapy has been limited by the inhibitory tumor microenvironment and heterogeneous expression of targetable antigens. Many creative strategies to overcome these limitations are being developed but still need to be tested clinically. Early phase clinical trials in neuroblastoma with GD2 CAR T cells are promising but results need to be validated on a larger scale. Most research in other pediatric solid tumors is still in early stages. Adoptive cell therapy represents a useful tool to improve the outcomes of many pediatric solid tumors but significant study is still required. Several clinical trials are ongoing to test therapies that have shown promise in the lab.
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