Aortic re-operation occurs at a mean rate of 2.4% per person-year in the five years after proximal aortic replacement and is strongly associated with initial operation for dissection.
Diagnosis and prediction of the severity of hepatitis C virus recurrence (HCVrec) after liver transplantation (LT) remain a challenge. MicroRNAs have been recently recognized as potential disease biomarkers.Archival liver biopsy samples from 43 HCV+ LT recipients were collected at clinical HCVrec time and at 3 years post-LT. Patients were classified as progressors (P = F0/F1) or nonprogressors (NP = F3/F4) according to the severity of fibrosis on the 3-year biopsy. Training (n = 27) and validation (n = 16) sets were defined. RNA was isolated from all biopsies at clinical HCVrec time, labeled and hybridized to miRNA-arrays. Progressors versus nonprogressors were compared using the twosample t-test. A p-value ≤0.01 was considered significant. The ingenuity pathway analysis tool was used for microRNA and miRNA:mRNA ontology data integration. Nine microRNAs were differentially expressed between groups. A supervised cluster analysis separated samples in two well-defined groups (progressors vs. nonprogressors). Pathway analysis associated those microRNAs with hepatitis, steatosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis and T cell-related immune response. Data integration identified 17 genes from a previous genomic study as 9-microRNAs signature targets. Seven microRNAs were successfully validated in the validation set using QPCR. We have identified a 9-microRNA signature able to identify early post-LT patients at high risk of severe HCVrec during long-term follow-up.
Objective: Medical treatment for eustachian tube dysfunction (ETD) is varied, with physician preference driving treatment choice and limited guidance for these options. An evaluation of the efficacy of medical management (MM) for ETD is warranted.Methods: A systematic review of three databases (PubMed, Scopus, and Embase) was performed through December 2020. Adults treated nonsurgically for ETD were included. Exclusion criteria were as follows: patulous ETD, ETD deriving from craniofacial anomalies, or surgical treatment. Data were extracted independently by two reviewers according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. A meta-analysis of continuous measures, proportions, and risk ratio was conducted.Results: Twelve articles were identified by systematic review, with either level 2 or 3 evidence. A meta-analysis of available data was performed on nine studies. A pooled cohort found 50.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 41.7-59.0) of patients experienced symptomatic improvement with MM. ETDQ-7 scores improved in a clinically nonsignificant manner by À0.88 (95% CI, À1.12 to À0.64) following medical treatment. Further, MM benefited from subacute and chronic symptoms in 30% to 64% and 11% to 50% of cases, respectively. Intranasal corticosteroids (INCS) were not efficacious, improving only 11% to 18% of chronic cases. Therapies such as Politzer devices and Valsalva therapy had minimally beneficial results.Conclusion: Our review did not find any level 1 evidence for MM of ETD in adults. Available evidence indicates INCS are ineffective for chronic symptoms and the efficacy of nonsurgical options for subacute ETD has yet to be determined. Further randomized controlled trials are needed to discern efficacy of single-agent medical therapies.
Background Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) describes a heterogenous group of diseases including CRS with (CRSwNP) or without nasal polyps (CRSsNP), aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD), and allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFRS). It affects 10 to 15% of the US population and is more common in women and White patients. However, these estimates are based on survey and database studies with innate diagnostic inaccuracy. Additionally, few studies report subtype-specific demographics. We explore the demographic differences of CRS in the U.S. by subtype and region. Objective To characterize demographic differences between the CRS population and the overall US population, and also between different CRS subtype populations. Methods We performed a systematic review for articles reporting on US demographics of adults with CRS. Study participants were required to have been diagnosed using consensus criteria. Data on demographics, geographic region, and CRS subtype were analyzed. Results Our study analyzed 31 unique studies representing 8409 patients with 50.7% females and weighted mean age of 48.0 years. Compared to the overall US population, CRS patients were predominantly White (78.5%) and non-Hispanic (94.5%) with under-representation of other races. Grouped by subtype, CRSwNP affected a significantly higher proportion of men (59.8%). AFRS affected a significantly higher proportion of Black patients (53.8%) while CRSsNP was more prevalent in White patients (84.2%). When grouped by region, the South had a significantly higher proportion of female (53%) and Black (17.8%) CRS patients. The West had a significantly higher proportion of Asian (4.5%) and Hispanic (12.3%) patients. Conclusions Significant demographic differences exist in CRS patients based on subtype and region. These data provide an estimation of the demographic make-up of CRS, but further high-level demographic studies are needed.
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