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  1. Article ; Online: U cast or functional bracing following fractures of the shaft of humerus.

    Persad, Ian J / Kommu, Sashi

    Emergency medicine journal : EMJ

    2007  Volume 24, Issue 5, Page(s) 361

    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Humeral Fractures/therapy ; Orthopedic Fixation Devices ; Treatment Outcome
    Language English
    Publishing date 2007-05
    Publishing country England
    Document type Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2040124-3
    ISSN 1472-0213 ; 1472-0205
    ISSN (online) 1472-0213
    ISSN 1472-0205
    DOI 10.1136/emj.2007.048504
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Feminizing hormone therapy in a Canadian cohort of transgender women with and without HIV.

    Armstrong, Ian / Lacombe-Duncan, Ashley / Shokoohi, Mostafa / Persad, Yasmeen / Tseng, Alice / Fung, Raymond / Underhill, Angela / Côté, Pierre / Machouf, Nimâ / Saucier, Adrien / Varriano, Brenda / Brundage, Monica / Jones, Reilly / Weisdorf, Thea / Goodhew, John / MacLeod, John / Loutfy, Mona

    Antiviral therapy

    2023  Volume 28, Issue 3, Page(s) 13596535231182505

    Abstract: Background: Potential bidirectional drug-drug interactions between feminizing hormone therapy (FHT) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) are of concern for trans women with HIV and their healthcare providers. This study aimed to characterize patterns of FHT ...

    Abstract Background: Potential bidirectional drug-drug interactions between feminizing hormone therapy (FHT) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) are of concern for trans women with HIV and their healthcare providers. This study aimed to characterize patterns of FHT and ART among trans women with HIV and to compare serum hormone levels to trans women without HIV.
    Methods: Charts of trans women were reviewed at seven HIV primary care or endocrinology clinics in Toronto and Montreal from 2018 to 2019. ART regimens, FHT use, serum estradiol, and serum testosterone levels were compared on the basis of HIV status (positive, negative, missing/unknown).
    Results: Of 1495 trans women, there were 86 trans women with HIV, of whom 79 (91.8%) were on ART. ART regimens were most commonly integrase inhibitor-based (67.4%), many boosted with ritonavir or cobicistat (45.3%). Fewer (71.8%) trans women with HIV were prescribed FHT, compared to those without HIV (88.4%) and those with missing/unknown status (90.2%,
    Conclusions: In this cohort, trans women with HIV were prescribed FHT less often than trans women with negative or unknown HIV status. There was no difference in serum estradiol or testosterone levels of trans women on FHT regardless of HIV status, providing reassurance regarding potential drug-drug interactions between FHT and ART.
    MeSH term(s) Female ; Humans ; Canada/epidemiology ; Estradiol/pharmacokinetics ; Estradiol/therapeutic use ; HIV Infections/drug therapy ; Testosterone/blood ; Transgender Persons ; Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ; Drug Interactions ; Anti-HIV Agents/pharmacokinetics ; Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use
    Chemical Substances Estradiol (4TI98Z838E) ; Testosterone (3XMK78S47O) ; Anti-HIV Agents
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-05-24
    Publishing country England
    Document type Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1339842-8
    ISSN 2040-2058 ; 1359-6535
    ISSN (online) 2040-2058
    ISSN 1359-6535
    DOI 10.1177/13596535231182505
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Oestradiol concentrations in trans women with HIV suppressed on unboosted integrase inhibitor regimens versus trans women without HIV taking oral oestradiol: a pilot study.

    Loutfy, Mona / Lacombe-Duncan, Ashley / Tseng, Alice / Persad, Yasmeen / Underhill, Angela / Kennedy, V Logan / Armstrong, Ian / Fung, Raymond / Bourns, Amy / Nguyen, Quang / Hranilovic, Sue / Weisdorf, Thea / Chan, L Y L / Kia, Hannah / Halpenny, Roberta / Iyer, Harshita / Jeyarajah, Nirubini / Kovchazov, George / McCully, Jennifer /
    Scarsi, Kimberly K

    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy

    2023  Volume 78, Issue 11, Page(s) 2653–2659

    Abstract: Background: Feminizing hormone therapy (FHT) is essential to many trans women. Concern about negative drug interactions between FHT and ART can be an ART adherence barrier among trans women with HIV.: Objectives: In this single-centre, parallel group, ...

    Abstract Background: Feminizing hormone therapy (FHT) is essential to many trans women. Concern about negative drug interactions between FHT and ART can be an ART adherence barrier among trans women with HIV.
    Objectives: In this single-centre, parallel group, cross-sectional pilot study, we measured serum oestradiol concentrations in trans women with HIV taking FHT and unboosted integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI)-based ART versus trans women without HIV taking FHT.
    Methods: We included trans women with and without HIV, aged ≥18 years, taking ≥2 mg/day of oral oestradiol for at least 3 months plus an anti-androgen. Trans women with HIV were on suppressive ART ≥3 months. Serum oestradiol concentrations were measured prior to medication dosing and 2, 4, 6 and 8 h post-dose. Median oestradiol concentrations were compared between groups using Wilcoxon rank-sum tests.
    Results: Participants (n = 8 with HIV, n = 7 without) had a median age of 32 (IQR: 28, 39) years. Among participants, the median oral oestradiol dose was 4 mg (range 2-6 mg). Participants had been taking FHT for a median of 4 years (IQR: 2, 8). Six trans women with HIV were taking bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide and two were taking dolutegravir/abacavir/lamivudine. All oestradiol concentrations were not significantly different between groups. Eleven (73%) participants had target oestradiol concentrations in the range 200-735 pmol/L at C4h (75% among women with HIV, 71% among those without HIV).
    Conclusions: Oestradiol concentrations were not statistically different in trans women with HIV compared with those without HIV, suggesting a low probability of clinically relevant drug-drug interactions between FHT and unboosted INSTI-based ART.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Female ; Adolescent ; Adult ; HIV Infections/drug therapy ; Pilot Projects ; Emtricitabine/therapeutic use ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; HIV-1 ; HIV Integrase Inhibitors/therapeutic use
    Chemical Substances Emtricitabine (G70B4ETF4S) ; HIV Integrase Inhibitors
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-07
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 191709-2
    ISSN 1460-2091 ; 0305-7453
    ISSN (online) 1460-2091
    ISSN 0305-7453
    DOI 10.1093/jac/dkad270
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Timing of radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy (RADICALS-RT): a randomised, controlled phase 3 trial.

    Parker, Christopher C / Clarke, Noel W / Cook, Adrian D / Kynaston, Howard G / Petersen, Peter Meidahl / Catton, Charles / Cross, William / Logue, John / Parulekar, Wendy / Payne, Heather / Persad, Rajendra / Pickering, Holly / Saad, Fred / Anderson, Juliette / Bahl, Amit / Bottomley, David / Brasso, Klaus / Chahal, Rohit / Cooke, Peter W /
    Eddy, Ben / Gibbs, Stephanie / Goh, Chee / Gujral, Sandeep / Heath, Catherine / Henderson, Alastair / Jaganathan, Ramasamy / Jakobsen, Henrik / James, Nicholas D / Kanaga Sundaram, Subramanian / Lees, Kathryn / Lester, Jason / Lindberg, Henriette / Money-Kyrle, Julian / Morris, Stephen / O'Sullivan, Joe / Ostler, Peter / Owen, Lisa / Patel, Prashant / Pope, Alvan / Popert, Richard / Raman, Rakesh / Røder, Martin Andreas / Sayers, Ian / Simms, Matthew / Wilson, Jim / Zarkar, Anjali / Parmar, Mahesh K B / Sydes, Matthew R

    Lancet (London, England)

    2020  Volume 396, Issue 10260, Page(s) 1413–1421

    Abstract: Background: The optimal timing of radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer is uncertain. We aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of adjuvant radiotherapy versus an observation policy with salvage radiotherapy for prostate- ... ...

    Abstract Background: The optimal timing of radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer is uncertain. We aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of adjuvant radiotherapy versus an observation policy with salvage radiotherapy for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) biochemical progression.
    Methods: We did a randomised controlled trial enrolling patients with at least one risk factor (pathological T-stage 3 or 4, Gleason score of 7-10, positive margins, or preoperative PSA ≥10 ng/mL) for biochemical progression after radical prostatectomy (RADICALS-RT). The study took place in trial-accredited centres in Canada, Denmark, Ireland, and the UK. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to adjuvant radiotherapy or an observation policy with salvage radiotherapy for PSA biochemical progression (PSA ≥0·1 ng/mL or three consecutive rises). Masking was not deemed feasible. Stratification factors were Gleason score, margin status, planned radiotherapy schedule (52·5 Gy in 20 fractions or 66 Gy in 33 fractions), and centre. The primary outcome measure was freedom from distant metastases, designed with 80% power to detect an improvement from 90% with salvage radiotherapy (control) to 95% at 10 years with adjuvant radiotherapy. We report on biochemical progression-free survival, freedom from non-protocol hormone therapy, safety, and patient-reported outcomes. Standard survival analysis methods were used. A hazard ratio (HR) of less than 1 favoured adjuvant radiotherapy. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00541047.
    Findings: Between Nov 22, 2007, and Dec 30, 2016, 1396 patients were randomly assigned, 699 (50%) to salvage radiotherapy and 697 (50%) to adjuvant radiotherapy. Allocated groups were balanced with a median age of 65 years (IQR 60-68). Median follow-up was 4·9 years (IQR 3·0-6·1). 649 (93%) of 697 participants in the adjuvant radiotherapy group reported radiotherapy within 6 months; 228 (33%) of 699 in the salvage radiotherapy group reported radiotherapy within 8 years after randomisation. With 169 events, 5-year biochemical progression-free survival was 85% for those in the adjuvant radiotherapy group and 88% for those in the salvage radiotherapy group (HR 1·10, 95% CI 0·81-1·49; p=0·56). Freedom from non-protocol hormone therapy at 5 years was 93% for those in the adjuvant radiotherapy group versus 92% for those in the salvage radiotherapy group (HR 0·88, 95% CI 0·58-1·33; p=0·53). Self-reported urinary incontinence was worse at 1 year for those in the adjuvant radiotherapy group (mean score 4·8 vs 4·0; p=0·0023). Grade 3-4 urethral stricture within 2 years was reported in 6% of individuals in the adjuvant radiotherapy group versus 4% in the salvage radiotherapy group (p=0·020).
    Interpretation: These initial results do not support routine administration of adjuvant radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy. Adjuvant radiotherapy increases the risk of urinary morbidity. An observation policy with salvage radiotherapy for PSA biochemical progression should be the current standard after radical prostatectomy.
    Funding: Cancer Research UK, MRC Clinical Trials Unit, and Canadian Cancer Society.
    MeSH term(s) Adenocarcinoma/pathology ; Adenocarcinoma/radiotherapy ; Adenocarcinoma/surgery ; Aged ; Biomarkers, Tumor/blood ; Disease-Free Survival ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasm Grading ; Proportional Hazards Models ; Prostate-Specific Antigen/blood ; Prostatectomy ; Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology ; Prostatic Neoplasms/radiotherapy ; Prostatic Neoplasms/surgery ; Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ; Salvage Therapy ; Survival Analysis ; Time Factors
    Chemical Substances Biomarkers, Tumor ; Prostate-Specific Antigen (EC 3.4.21.77)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-09-28
    Publishing country England
    Document type Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Multicenter Study ; Randomized Controlled Trial ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 3306-6
    ISSN 1474-547X ; 0023-7507 ; 0140-6736
    ISSN (online) 1474-547X
    ISSN 0023-7507 ; 0140-6736
    DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31553-1
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: External validation and recalibration of an incidental meningioma prognostic model – IMPACT

    Julie Woodfield / Boris Krischek / Giles Critchley / Damian Holliman / Angelos Kolias / Thomas Santarius / Ola Rominiyi / Michael McDermott / Michael D Jenkinson / Jörg-Christian Tonn / Mohsen Javadpour / Andrea Saladino / Tiit Illimar Mathiesen / Rory Piper / Michael Vogelbaum / Chaya Brodie / Sara Venturini / Daniel M Fountain / Roland Goldbrunner /
    Elliot Tilling / Felix Sahm / Priscilla Brastianos / Rory J Piper / Antonio Santoro / Sylvia Kurz / Pierfrancesco Lapolla / Andrea Mingoli / Jennifer Brown / Debraj Mukherjee / Simon Walling / Andrew Morokoff / Patrick Wen / Ghazaleh Tabatabai / Jill Barnholtz-Sloan / Ryan K Mathew / Alexander Smedley / Helen Shih / William Taylor / Minh Nguyen / Bryony Ford / Samantha J Mills / Tamara Ali / Ruwanthi Kolamunnage-Dona / Josephine Jung / Muhammed Elhadi / Erminia Albanese / Aswin Chari / David Rowland / Melissa Gough / Michael Cearns / Simon Lammy / Yasir Chowdhury / Christian Mawrin / Mahmoud Saleh / Jens Schittenhelm / Farshad Nassiri / Raymond Huang / Pietro Familiari / Manfred Westphal / Warren Selman / Daniel Brown / Nathan McSorley / Oliver Hanemann / Richard Pullicino / Francesco Gaillard / Mirjam Renovanz / Chris Barrett / Christine Jungk / Aaron Cohen-Gadol / Javier Martín-Alonso / Gelareh Zadeh / Hytham Hamid / Abdurrahman I Islim / Christopher P Millward / Shaveta Mehta / Usama Ali / Shelli Diane Koszdin / Theo Georgious / Andrew R Brodbelt / Mohamed Abdelsadg / Suhaib Abualsaud / Amro Abuleil / Kevin Agyemang / Hanan Akbari / Likhith Alakandy / Clarissa Alfonso / Arousa Ali / Michael Amoo / Mohamed A. R. Arbab / Mutiu Asha / Kareem Austin / Khaled Badran / Jarnail Bal / Parameswaran Bhattathiri / Paul M. Brennan / Andrew R. Brodbelt / Ferran Brugada-Bellsolà / Placido Bruzzaniti / Annabel Butcher / Rory S. Cairns / Michael Canty / Sachiv Chakravarti / Rebecca Chave-Cox / Anna Craig-McQuade / Peter Crossley / Elizabeth Culpin / Alessia D'Amico / Bassam Dabbous / Pedro David Delgado-López / Mohamed Draz / Katharine J. Drummond / Rusiru T. Ekanayaka / Ibrahim Elmaadawi / Omar Elmandouh / Mazin Elsharif / Daisy Evans / Andreas Fahlström / Fleur L. Fisher / Daniel M. Fountain / Keiko Fox / Chloé Gelder / Shamayitri Ghosh / Aimee Goel / Athanasios Grivas / Andrew Gvozdanovic / Allan Hall / Liv Hartrick / Samih Hassan / Jack Henry / Abdurrahman I. Islim / Asgeir S. Jakola / Michael D. Jenkinson / Sanjeeva Jeyaretna / Adrian Jimenez / Andranik Kahramanian / Neeraj Kalra / David O. Kamson / Oliver Kennion / Adham M. Khalafallah / Sarah Kingdon / Howra Ktayen / Aditaya Kumar / Jun Yi Lau / Jing Xian Lee / Ryan Leyden / Patricia Littlechild / Sophie Liu / Darmanin Lora-Kay / Vivia Lung / Stephen T. Magill / Hani J. Marcus / Fawaz E. Marhoom / Ryan K. Mathew / Calan Mathieson / Tobias Mederer / Torstien R. Meling / Samantha J. Mills / Christopher P. Millward / Mujtaba Mohammad / Amir H. Zamanipoor Najafabadi / Olivia Näslund / Imran Noorani / Gildas Patet / Omar N. Pathmanaban / Andrea Perera / Amit Persad / See Yung Phang / Rory J. Piper / Jonathan Pollock / Benjamin Price / Martin Proescholdt / James Robins / Bobby Sachdev / Fozia Saeed / Ieva Sataite / Antony Kevin Scafa / Verena Schadewaldt / Syed Wajahat Shah / Mustafa El Sheikh / Zenab Sher / Bente Sandvei Skeie / Agbolahan Sofela / Jerome St George / Torbjørn Strømsnes / Nigel Suttner / Philip Theodosopoulos / Manjul Tripathi / Ismail Ughratdar / James Ulrich / Adithya Varma / Anil Varma / Maria Velicu / Esther Wu / Jacob Young / Giuseppa Zancana / Catherine Zhang / Karolyn Au / Felix Behling / Linda Bi / Nicholas Butowski / Ana Castro / Marta Couce / Francesco Dimeco / Katherine J. Drummond / Ian Dunn / Craig Erker / Michelle Felicella / Eva Galanis / Norbert Galldiks / Caterina Giannini / Christel Herold-Mende / Luke Hnenny / Craig Horbinski / Gerhard Jungwirth / Timothy Kaufmann / Daniel Lachance / Christian Lafougere / Katrin Lamszus / Serge Makarenko / Tathiana Malta / Jennifer Moliterno-Gunel / HK Ng / Houtan Noushmehr / Arie Perry / Laila Poisson / Bianco Pollo / Aditya Ragunathan / David Raleigh / Franz Ricklefs / Antonio Santacroce / Christian Schichor / Nils Schimdt / Andrew Sloan / Matija Snuderl / Jim Snyder / Erik Sulman / Suganth Suppiah / Marcos Tatagiba / Marco Timmer / Andreas Von Deimling / Tobias Walbert / Justin Z. Wang / Stephen Yip / Gabriel Zada / Viktor Zherebitskiy / Michael T.C. Poon

    BMJ Open, Vol 12, Iss

    protocol for an international multicentre retrospective cohort study

    2022  Volume 1

    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  6. Article ; Online: Reduced sodium/proton exchanger NHE3 activity causes congenital sodium diarrhea.

    Janecke, Andreas R / Heinz-Erian, Peter / Yin, Jianyi / Petersen, Britt-Sabina / Franke, Andre / Lechner, Silvia / Fuchs, Irene / Melancon, Serge / Uhlig, Holm H / Travis, Simon / Marinier, Evelyne / Perisic, Vojislav / Ristic, Nina / Gerner, Patrick / Booth, Ian W / Wedenoja, Satu / Baumgartner, Nadja / Vodopiutz, Julia / Frechette-Duval, Marie-Christine /
    De Lafollie, Jan / Persad, Rabindranath / Warner, Neil / Tse, C Ming / Sud, Karan / Zachos, Nicholas C / Sarker, Rafiquel / Zhu, Xinjun / Muise, Aleixo M / Zimmer, Klaus-Peter / Witt, Heiko / Zoller, Heinz / Donowitz, Mark / Müller, Thomas

    Human molecular genetics

    2015  Volume 24, Issue 23, Page(s) 6614–6623

    Abstract: Congenital sodium diarrhea (CSD) refers to an intractable diarrhea of intrauterine onset with high fecal sodium loss. CSD is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. Syndromic CSD is caused by SPINT2 mutations. While we recently described four cases of ... ...

    Abstract Congenital sodium diarrhea (CSD) refers to an intractable diarrhea of intrauterine onset with high fecal sodium loss. CSD is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. Syndromic CSD is caused by SPINT2 mutations. While we recently described four cases of the non-syndromic form of CSD that were caused by dominant activating mutations in intestinal receptor guanylate cyclase C (GC-C), the genetic cause for the majority of CSD is still unknown. Therefore, we aimed to determine the genetic cause for non-GC-C non-syndromic CSD in 18 patients from 16 unrelated families applying whole-exome sequencing and/or chromosomal microarray analyses and/or direct Sanger sequencing. SLC9A3 missense, splicing and truncation mutations, including an instance of uniparental disomy, and whole-gene deletion were identified in nine patients from eight families with CSD. Two of these nine patients developed inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) at 4 and 16 years of age. SLC9A3 encodes Na(+)/H(+) antiporter 3 (NHE3), which is the major intestinal brush-border Na(+)/H(+) exchanger. All mutations were in the NHE3 N-terminal transport domain, and all missense mutations were in the putative membrane-spanning domains. Identified SLC9A3 missense mutations were functionally characterized in plasma membrane NHE null fibroblasts. SLC9A3 missense mutations compromised NHE3 activity by reducing basal surface expression and/or loss of basal transport function of NHE3 molecules, whereas acute regulation was normal. This study identifies recessive mutations in NHE3, a downstream target of GC-C, as a cause of CSD and implies primary basal NHE3 malfunction as a predisposition for IBD in a subset of patients.
    MeSH term(s) Abnormalities, Multiple/genetics ; Abnormalities, Multiple/metabolism ; Abnormalities, Multiple/physiopathology ; Adolescent ; Adult ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; DNA Mutational Analysis ; Diarrhea/congenital ; Diarrhea/genetics ; Diarrhea/metabolism ; Diarrhea/physiopathology ; Female ; Genes, Recessive ; Humans ; Infant ; Infant, Newborn ; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/genetics ; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/metabolism ; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/physiopathology ; Intestines/metabolism ; Intestines/physiopathology ; Male ; Metabolism, Inborn Errors/genetics ; Metabolism, Inborn Errors/metabolism ; Metabolism, Inborn Errors/physiopathology ; Microvilli/metabolism ; Mutation ; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchanger 3 ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers/genetics ; Young Adult
    Chemical Substances SLC9A3 protein, human ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchanger 3 ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-12-01
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1108742-0
    ISSN 1460-2083 ; 0964-6906
    ISSN (online) 1460-2083
    ISSN 0964-6906
    DOI 10.1093/hmg/ddv367
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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