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

Study characterizes unique immune response in patients who experience inflammatory arthritis as side effect of cancer therapies

2023-08-01
(Press-News.org) Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies used to treat cancer come with the risk of adverse autoimmune responses, including arthritis that can persist for years and require joint replacement surgery. Little is known about the specific cells responsible for these events. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, and collaborators led a study to investigate these immune adverse events and identified a specific type of CD8 T cell that characterizes inflammatory arthritis induced by ICI therapies.

Researchers studied T cells from a patient with severe ICI-arthritis who required bilateral knee replacements. In addition to these two joint tissue samples, they studied the fluid that accumulates within joints from an additional 23 patients with this condition and compared these samples to samples from patients with two common autoimmune conditions, rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. By comparing protein and gene expression levels across diseases, they were able to characterize unique immunological features of the CD8 T cells in ICI-arthritis. They further identified that a specific set of cytokines, type I interferons, can promote the CD8 T cell activation seen in ICI-arthritis.

Patients whose cancer was treated with ICI had high levels of this CD8 T cell type, and additional analysis revealed that the cells traveled between the joints and blood. Further, the T cells persisted in the bloodstream, providing one explanation for why ICI-arthritis continues even after ICI therapy is discontinued. Limitations include a small cohort of patients who are taking various treatments. Further research is needed to characterize how the CD8 T cells contribute to joint inflammation.

“Our results suggest that ICI therapy gives rise to a unique population of CD8 T cells in patients who develop ICI-arthritis,” said co-corresponding author Deepak A. Rao, MD, PhD, of the Brigham’s Division of Rheumatology, Inflammation, Immunity. “The immune events we characterized differ dramatically from the typical responses we have seen in autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis.”


in Science Immunology.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Three doses of COVID-19 vaccine leads to catch-up antibody responses among the particularly vulnerable

Three doses of COVID-19 vaccine leads to catch-up antibody responses among the particularly vulnerable
2023-08-01
Even vulnerable people, who are at risk of severe Covid-19, achieved good antibody levels after three doses of mRNA vaccine. This is shown by a study from the University of Gothenburg on patients having undergone a bone marrow transplant or with liver disease, including cirrhosis. The aim of the study, which has been published in the journal Infectious Diseases, was to investigate the effects of repeated vaccinations and hybrid immunity against Covid-19 among particularly vulnerable individuals. Hybrid immunity refers to the protection provided by vaccination in combination with SARS-CoV-2 ...

UCSF Medical Center is among nation’s top hospitals for 2023-24

2023-08-01
UCSF Medical Center Is Among Nation’s Top Hospitals for 2023-24  U.S. News & World Report ranks UCSF Health adult care among nation’s top 10 hospitals in 7 specialties, Best in the West for neurology/neurosurgery and rheumatology UCSF Medical Center has been named to the Honor Roll of the nation’s top hospitals for adult care in U.S. News & World Report’s 2023-24 Best Hospitals rankings, representing the highest quality of care and safety standards in the country.  The distinction was earned by only 22 medical ...

Immigrant nurses in long-term care facilities often have more “human capital” compared to American-born nurses, MU researcher finds

Immigrant nurses in long-term care facilities often have more “human capital” compared to American-born nurses, MU researcher finds
2023-08-01
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- When assessing the skills and competencies or “human capital” of long-term care registered nurses in the United States, studies often focus solely on years of experience and traditional educational backgrounds. However, a new study conducted by a nurse scientist now at University of Missouri found that by incorporating additional criteria, such as ability to speak multiple languages, additional certificates or trainings and licenses to practice in multiple states, immigrant nurses often represent far more human capital than their American-born counterparts. Roy Thompson, a postdoctoral fellow in the MU Sinclair School of Nursing ...

New insights into heterotopic ossification: Progenitor cells play a key role in aberrant bone formation

New insights into heterotopic ossification: Progenitor cells play a key role in aberrant bone formation
2023-08-01
In a new study published on 21 July 2023 by the journal Bone Research, a team of researchers from Johns Hopkins University, using a combination of lineage tracing and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), delved into the contribution of synovial/tendon sheath progenitor cells to heterotopic bone formation. The researchers identified a distinct population of Tppp3+ tendon progenitor cells that actively participated in the formation of ectopic bone in vivo. Their findings provide new insights into the intricate cellular processes driving heterotopic ossification and offer potential therapeutic targets to prevent and ...

Where Black adolescents live affects their mental health

2023-08-01
It’s easy to imagine that growing up in a neighborhood with safe and clean parks, little to no discrimination, and where people are not struggling financially makes for a lower-stress childhood. In contrast, neighborhoods with few community spaces, violence, and poverty create a higher-stress environment for a child to live in. Unfortunately, systemic and structural issues such as wealth inequality, residential segregation, barriers to home ownership, and environmental injustice in neighborhoods where Black American adolescents disproportionately reside make ...

Amazon dark earth boosts tree growth as much as sixfold

Amazon dark earth boosts tree growth as much as sixfold
2023-08-01
A type of soil called terra preta da Amazônia, or Amazon dark earth (ADE), promotes faster growth of trees and enhances their development in qualitative terms, according to an article published in the journal Frontiers in Soil Science.  The findings reported in the article resulted from studies supported by FAPESP (projects 20/08927-0, 18/19000-4 and 14/50320-4) under the aegis of its Biodiversity, Characterization, Conservation, Restoration and Sustainable Use Program (BIOTA).  “ADE is rich in nutrients and supports communities of microorganisms that help plants grow, among other things. Native people of the Amazon have ...

Sweet smell of success: Simple fragrance method produces major memory boost

2023-08-01
Irvine, Calif., Aug. 1, 2023 — When a fragrance wafted through the bedrooms of older adults for two hours every night for six months, memories skyrocketed. Participants in this study by University of California, Irvine neuroscientists reaped a 226% increase in cognitive capacity compared to the control group. The researchers say the finding transforms the long-known tie between smell and memory into an easy, non-invasive technique for strengthening memory and potentially deterring dementia.   The team’s study appears in Frontiers in Neuroscience. ...

Links between attention and conscious perception highlighted in frontoparietal networks

Links between attention and conscious perception highlighted in frontoparietal networks
2023-08-01
Almost half of patients who experienced a stroke in the right cerebral hemisphere later develop a very unusual symptom: they lose the ability to perceive what is happening in the left side of space. As a result, they tend to eat only the right side of their plate, ignore people on their left, and have great difficulty finding their way around. This disorder, known as hemispatial neglect, does not involve basic visual abilities, which remain intact. “These patients see very well. The problem ...

NIH awards Penn Medicine and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia $26 million grant to develop therapies for rare newborn genetic diseases

2023-08-01
PHILADELPHIA—A Penn Medicine and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) team will seek to develop treatments for three rare, incurable genetic diseases with the help of a $26 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The research will focus on three genetic diseases that impact newborns in the first weeks and months after birth: Phenylketonuria (PKU), hereditary tyrosinemia type 1 (HT1), and mucopolysaccharidosis type 1 (MPSI), commonly known as Hurler’s Syndrome. PKU causes an amino acid—called phenylalanine—to build up in the body, and as long as treatment begins at birth, PKU is ...

False claims attacks on infrastructure focus of NSF-funded research

False claims attacks on infrastructure focus of NSF-funded research
2023-08-01
False claims and disinformation, especially in a social media-driven society, have become major problems with potentially severe consequences. Kash Barker, Ph.D., principal investigator and the Anadarko Presidential Professor in the School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Gallogly College of Engineering at the University of Oklahoma, is leading a team of researchers examining indirect attacks targeting infrastructure systems via unwitting users, supported by a $599,947 grant from the National Science Foundation's Secure ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Potential new treatment for sepsis

Study reveals how many hours of video games per week might be too many

Electrospinning for mimicking bioelectric microenvironment in tissue regeneration

Home fingertip oxygen monitors less accurate for people with darker skin tones

Six weeks in a cast no less effective than surgery for unstable ankle fractures

Precautionary approach to alcohol-free and low alcohol drinks needed to protect public health, say experts

Gas-atomized Ca–Mg alloy powders produce hydrogen simply by adding water — high-efficiency hydrogen generation at room temperature

British redcoat’s lost memoir reveals harsh realities of life as a disabled veteran

World-leading rare earth magnet recycling facility launches in UK

Corday Selden selected for the Oceanography Society Early Career Award

MIT chemists determine the structure of the fuzzy coat that surrounds Tau proteins

Same moves, different terrain: How bacteria navigate complex environments without changing their playbook

Severe weather is deadly for vulnerable older adults long after the storm ends, study finds

Expert panel highlights opportunities for improving cancer studies

Hearing aid prescriptions not associated with changes in memory and thinking

Seth Zippel selected for The Oceanography Society Early Career Award

Jeremy Horowitz selected for The Oceanography Society Early Career Award

Kennesaw State University’s Jerry Mack named Paul “Bear” Bryant Newcomer Coach of the Year

Ancient teeth are treasure troves of data on Iron Age lifestyles

Avocados may become easier to grow in India—but not if global emissions remain high

Pregnant women with IBD show heightened inflammation in vaginal mucosa

Underwater photos show seabirds, seals and fish interacting with a tidal turbine in Washington State

1 in 5 surveyed UK adults who have experienced the death of a pet report it as more distressing than experienced human deaths, with significant rates of prolonged grief disorder symptoms also being re

Polyester microfibers in soil negatively impact the development of cherry tomato plants in experiments, raising concerns over the potential effect of high levels of such contaminants

LGBTQ+ adults may be around twice as likely to be unemployed or to report workforce non-participation compared to heterosexual adults, per large representative Australian survey

Horses can smell fear: In experiments where horses smelled sweat from scared humans, they reacted to scary and sudden events with increased fear and reduced human interaction

New synaptic formation in adolescence challenges conventional views of brain development

Scientists identify target to treat devastating brain disease

Oliver Zielinski selected as Fellow of The Oceanography Society

Has progress stalled on gender equality at work?

[Press-News.org] Study characterizes unique immune response in patients who experience inflammatory arthritis as side effect of cancer therapies