PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers reveal pathogenesis and therapeutic strategy of pre-engraftment syndrome

Researchers reveal pathogenesis and therapeutic strategy of pre-engraftment syndrome
2021-07-19
(Press-News.org) The research team led by Prof. WEI Haiming and Prof. TIAN Zhigang from Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), collaborating with the research group led by Prof. SUN Zimin from the First Affiliated Hospital of USTC revealed the pathological mechanism of severe pre-engraftment syndrome (PES) after umbilical cord blood transplantation, not only providing a treatment strategy for patients with PES, but significantly guiding for further improvement in the curative effect of unrelated cord blood transplantation (UCBT). This study was published in Nature Communications. UCBT is an important means to cure hematological malignancies, hematopoietic failure, congenital immunodeficiency and some genetic metabolic diseases. The incidence of chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after transplantation is low and mild, so that the quality of life of patients is high. The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC has so far completed 1519 cases of UCBT since the first successful case using this method in the treatment of children's malignant hematological diseases in 2000, which makes it an internationally recognized umbilical cord blood transplantation treatment center, encouraging the emergence of more and more relevant clinical and scientific research achievements Unfortunately, however, in the early stage after UCBT, 70-80% of recipients will suffer PES, which is characterized by high fever, rash, diarrhea, and other clinical findings. Severe PES increases the transplant-related mortality, but its mechanism is still unclear. Further study and revelation of the pathogenesis of PES after UCBT is of great clinical significance for the treatment of PES patients and the reduction of transplantation related mortality. Faced with this problem, the research group analyzed the peripheral blood of recipients after UCBT and found significantly increasing number of monocytes in patients with PES. These monocytes derived from cord blood had inflammatory characteristics and produced proinflammatory cytokines such as GM-CSF and IL-6. After UCBT, monocytes expanded rapidly in the recipient body, increasing the levels of GM-CSF and IL-6 in serum, which led to the occurrence of PES. Based on the pathogenesis study of PES, the team applied for a clinical trial using tocilizumab to block the IL-6 receptor at http://www.chictr.org.cn (Reference: ChiCTR1800015472) among patients with severe PES. The results showed that the use of tobuzumab for intervention treatment significantly controlled the clinical symptoms of PES and reduce the mortality of patients. This study, lasting nearly 8 years, provides practical guidance for USTC to propose and implement treatment plan (tobuzumab) for patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia. This treatment plan (tobuzumab) has been currently approved by U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) and National Health Service (NHS) in clinical application.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Researchers reveal pathogenesis and therapeutic strategy of pre-engraftment syndrome

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Deconstructing the infectious machinery of SARS-CoV-2

Deconstructing the infectious machinery of SARS-CoV-2
2021-07-19
In February 2020, a trio of bio-imaging experts were sitting amiably around a dinner table at a scientific conference in Washington, D.C., when the conversation shifted to what was then a worrying viral epidemic in China. Without foreseeing the global disaster to come, they wondered aloud how they might contribute. Nearly a year and a half later, those three scientists and their many collaborators across three national laboratories have published a comprehensive study in Biophysical Journal that - alongside other recent, complementary studies of coronavirus proteins ...

Chemists found an effective remedy for "aged" brain diseases

Chemists found an effective remedy for aged brain diseases
2021-07-19
Russian scientists have synthesized chemical compounds that can stop the degeneration of neurons in Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and other severe brain pathologies. These substances can provide a breakthrough in the treatment of neurodegenerative pathologies. New molecules of pyrrolyl- and indolylazine classes activate intracellular mechanisms to combat one of the main causes of "aged" brain diseases - an excess of so-called amyloid structures that accumulate in the human brain with age. The essence of the study was published in the European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. Experts from the Institute of Cytology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Organic Synthesis of the Ural Branch of the Russian ...

The mathematics of repulsion for new graphene catalysts

The mathematics of repulsion for new graphene catalysts
2021-07-19
A new mathematical model helps predict the tiny changes in carbon-based materials that could yield interesting properties. Scientists at Tohoku University and colleagues in Japan have developed a mathematical model that abstracts the key effects of changes to the geometries of carbon material and predicts its unique properties. The details were published in the journal Carbon. Scientists generally use mathematical models to predict the properties that might emerge when a material is changed in certain ways. Changing the geometry of three-dimensional (3D) graphene, which is made of networks of carbon atoms, by adding chemicals or introducing topological defects, can improve its catalytic properties, for example. But it has been difficult for scientists to understand why this happens exactly. The ...

Understanding the physics in new metals

Understanding the physics in new metals
2021-07-19
Researchers from the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI and the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), working in an international team, have developed a new method for complex X-ray studies that will aid in better understanding so-called correlated metals. These materials could prove useful for practical applications in areas such as superconductivity, data processing, and quantum computers. Today the researchers present their work in the journal Physical Review X. In substances such as silicon or aluminium, the mutual repulsion of electrons hardly affects the material properties. Not so with so-called correlated materials, in which the electrons interact strongly with one another. The movement of one electron in a correlated material leads ...

The era of single-spin color centers in silicon carbide is approaching

2021-07-19
Prof. LI Chuanfeng, Prof. XU Jinshi and their colleagues from Prof. GUO Guangcan's group, University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), realized the high-contrast readout and coherent manipulation of a single silicon carbide divacancy color center electron spin at room temperature for the first time in the world, in cooperation with Prof. Adam Gali, from the Wigner Research Centre for Physics in Hungary. This work was published in National Science Review on July 5, 2021. Solid-state spin color centers are of utmost importance in many applications of quantum technologies, the outstanding one among which is the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond. Since the detection ...

African swine fever: No risk to consumers

2021-07-19
African swine fever (ASF), first detected in Germany in domestic pigs on 15 July 2021, does not pose a health hazard to humans. "The ASF pathogen cannot be transferred to humans", explains Professor Dr. Dr. Andreas Hensel, President of the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR). "No risk to health is posed by direct contact with diseased animals or from eating food made from infected domestic pigs or wild boar". The ASF pathogen is a virus which infects domestic pigs and wild boar and which leads to a severe, often lethal, disease in these animals. It is transferred via direct contact or with excretions from infected animals, or through ticks. The ASF virus is endemic to infected wild animals ...

A breath of fresh air for emphysema research

A breath of fresh air for emphysema research
2021-07-19
Tokyo, Japan - Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) causes illness and death worldwide. It is characterized by destruction of the walls of tiny air sacs in the lungs, known as emphysema, and a decline in lung function. Little has been known about the mechanisms by which it begins to develop. But now, researchers from Japan have found a protein that promotes the development of the early stages of emphysema, with the potential to be a therapeutic target. COPD can be triggered by environmental factors such as cigarette smoking that result in lung inflammation. The development of inflammation involves the movement ...

Personalized immunotherapy response studied in body-on-a-chip cancer models

Personalized immunotherapy response studied in body-on-a-chip cancer models
2021-07-19
WINSTON-SALEM, NC, JULY 19, 2021 -- Wake Forest researchers and clinicians are using patient-specific tumor 'organoid' models as a preclinical companion platform to better evaluate immunotherapy treatment for appendiceal cancer, one of the rarest cancers affecting only 1 in 100,000 people. Immunotherapies, also known as biologic therapies, activate the body's own immune system to control, and eliminate cancer. Appendiceal cancer is historically resistant to systemic chemotherapy, and the effect of immunotherapy is essentially unknown because clinical trials are difficult to perform due to lack of ...

COVID-19 made unequal access to food worse, study suggests

2021-07-19
COLUMBUS, Ohio - When COVID-19 hit, affluent Columbus residents responded by taking significantly fewer trips to large grocery and big-box stores, apparently ordering more online and stocking up when they did go out to shop. With fewer options available to them, low-income people had to double down on what they had always done: regular trips to the local dollar stores and small groceries to get their family's food. That's the conclusion of a new study that analyzed traffic to Columbus grocery sellers before, during and after the COVID-19 lockdown. Dollar stores and small local grocers in neighborhoods housing mostly low-income people of color didn't see as much of a decline in customers during the lockdown as did large grocery and big-box stores, ...

Bonding's next top model -- Projecting bond properties with machine learning

Bondings next top model -- Projecting bond properties with machine learning
2021-07-19
Tokyo, Japan - Designing materials that have the necessary properties to fulfill specific functions is a challenge faced by researchers working in areas from catalysis to solar cells. To speed up development processes, modeling approaches can be used to predict information to guide refinements. Researchers from The University of Tokyo Institute of Industrial Science have developed a machine learning model to determine characteristics of bonded and adsorbed materials based on parameters of the individual components. Their findings are published in Applied Physics Express. Factors such as the length and strength of bonds in materials play ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Philippines' counter-terrorism strategy still stalled after 7 years since the ‘ISIS siege’ on Marawi

BU doc honored by the American College of Surgeons

Airborne single-photon lidar system achieves high-resolution 3D imaging

Stem cell transplants and survival rates on the rise across all racial and ethnic groups

Study reports chlamydia and gonorrhea more likely to be treated per CDC guidelines in males, younger patients and individuals identifying as Black or multiracial

Plastic food packaging contains harmful substances

Spring snow, sparkling in the sun, can reveal more than just good skiing conditions

Using AI to improve diagnosis of rare genetic disorders

Study unveils balance of AI and preserving humanity in health care

Capturing and visualizing the phase transition mediated thermal stress of thermal barrier coating materials via a cross-scale integrated computational approach

Study reveals emotional turmoil experienced after dog-theft is like that of a caregiver losing a child

PhRMA Foundation awards $1M for equity-focused research on digital health tools

Women with heart disease are less likely to receive life-saving drugs than men

How electric vehicle drivers can escape range anxiety

How do birds flock? Researchers do the math to reveal previously unknown aerodynamic phenomenon

Experts call for global genetic warning system to combat the next pandemic and antimicrobial resistance

Genetic variations may predispose people to Parkinson’s disease following long-term pesticide exposure, study finds

Deer are expanding north, and that’s not good for caribou

Puzzling link between depression and cardiovascular disease explained at last: they partly develop from the same gene module

Synthetic droplets cause a stir in the primordial soup

Future parents more likely to get RSV vaccine when pregnant if aware that RSV can be a serious illness in infants

Microbiota enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis-secreted BFT-1 promotes breast cancer cell stemness and chemoresistance through its functional receptor NOD1

The Lundquist Institute receives $2.6 million grant from U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity to develop wearable biosensors

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of obesity-induced inflammation and metabolic dysfunction

Study highlights increased risk of second cancers among breast cancer survivors

International DNA Day launch for Hong Kong’s Moonshot for Biology

New scientific resources map food components to improve human and environmental health

Mass General Brigham research identifies pitfalls and opportunities for generative artificial intelligence in patient messaging systems

Opioids during pregnancy not linked to substantially increased risk of psychiatric disorders in children

Universities and schools urged to ban alcohol industry-backed health advice

[Press-News.org] Researchers reveal pathogenesis and therapeutic strategy of pre-engraftment syndrome