618 Gynäkologie, Geburtsmedizin, Pädiatrie, Geriatrie
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Expression immunmodulierende Marker in Zusammenhang mit Immuntherapie bei kindlichen Hirntumoren
(2024)
Atypische teratoide Rhabdoidtumore sind trotz Ausschöpfen der multimodalen Therapieoptionen weiterhin mit einer schlechten Prognose belastet. Gründe hierfür liegen in den oftmals unzureichenden Resektionsmöglichkeiten, dem jungen Erkrankungsalter der PatientInnen und der Resistenz der Tumorzellen gegenüber Chemotherapeutika (Frühwald et al. 2020; Egiz et al. 2022; Richards et al. 2019). Gerade deshalb versucht man durch die aktuelle Forschung zu kindlichen Hirntumoren mit Immuntherapie ein besseres Outcome zu erreichen. Wichtige Grundlagen hierzu sind durch diese Arbeit dargestellt worden. Erstmals wurde gezeigt, dass Tumorzellen der AT/RT sowohl HLA-Klasse I und -Klasse II Antigene präsentieren. Es wurde außerdem die Expression von PD-L1 nachgewiesen. Des Weiteren konnte die Anwesenheit von Immunzellen durch den Nachweis CD 3+ Zellen bewiesen werden. Insgesamt zeigte sich eine große Heterogenität innerhalb des einzelnen und unter den verschiedenen Tumoren. Es zeigte sich eine negative Korrelation zwischen der Expression von MHC I und CD 3+ Zellen, welche insgesamt für einen Tumor Escape Mechanismus sprechen könnte, wie er bereits bei Glioblastomen nachgewiesen wurde (Bagley et al. 2018; Marcu et al. 2021). Es sollte eine Ausweitung der hier begonnen Forschung mit Einbeziehung der personenbezogenen Daten und Vergrößerung der untersuchten Fallzahl erfolgen.
Die Inadäquate Sinustachykardie (IST) ist eine häufige Erkrankung des autonomen Nervensystems bei Kindern und Erwachsenen. Die Diagnose und Therapie einer IST bei Jugendlichen ist bisher nicht genau definiert. In dieser retrospektiven Studie haben wir unsere Hypothese bezüglich autonomer Dysfunktion im Kindesalter durch die Analyse von 24-h Herzfrequenzvariabilität (HRV) bei 479 Kindern mit einem Durchschnittsalter von 13,7 ± 2,1 Jahren, die innerhalb der letzten 15 Jahre an die pädiatrische Ambulanz überwiesen wurden, untersucht.
74 Jugendliche hatten eine mittlere Herzfrequenz ≥95/min (Cut-off Werte für eine IST basieren auf der gesunden Kontrollgruppe) und hatten damit eine IST.
Wir stellten fest, dass das Risiko einer IST bei Jugendlichen mit einer Aufmerksamkeitsdefizit-/Hyperaktivitätsstörung (ADHS) (OR = 3,5, p < 0,001), Prä-Hypertonie (OR = 2,5, p = 0,043) und Hypertonie (OR = 2,1, p = 0,02) hoch ist; nicht signifikant erhöht bei Kindern mit Kleinwuchs (OR = 1,9, p = 0,19), chirurgisch behandelte angeborene Herzkrankheit (OR = 1,4). ,p = 0,51) und Adipositas ohne Bluthochdruck (OR = 1,4; p = 0,25); und unbedeutsam bei Jugendlichen mit Anorexia nervosa (OR = 0,3, p = 0,26) und konstitutioneller Dünnheit (OR = 0,9, p = 0,89).
Eine IST war mit signifikant reduzierten HRV-Werten und erhöhten Blutdrücken assoziiert, was auf ein erhöhtes kardiovaskuläres Risiko hindeutet.
In dieser retrospektiven Analyse litten 15,4 % der Jugendlichen an einer IST mit einer 24h HF ≥ 95 bpm hauptsächlich aufgrund einer ADHS und Hypertonie.
Bei der HPP handelt es sich um eine seltene, erblich bedingte Stoffwechselerkrankung, die unter anderem mit einer Störung des Knochen- und Mineralstoffwechsels einhergeht. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, die objektiv messbare Aktivität und die HRQoL der jungen HPP-Patientinnen und -Patienten zu untersuchen. Dazu sollten die hierbei erhobenen Daten des erkrankten Patientenkollektivs mit den Daten des gesunden Kontrollkollektivs verglichen werden. Dies geschah unter der Verwendung von Accelerometrie, Spiroergometrie und etablierten Fragebögen in 18 Probandinnen und Probanden und 18 Gesundkontrollen.
In den Fragebögen zeigten sich deutliche Defizite, welche sich nur zum Teil in den objektiven Untersuchungen wiederspiegelten. Weitere Untersuchungen mit einer größeren Studienpopulation und Validierung der Untersuchungsmethoden für die HPP werden zukünftig benötigt.
Background and purpose
Pediatric adrenocortical carcinoma (pACC) is a rare disease with poor prognosis. Publications on radiotherapy (RT) are scarce. This review summarizes the current data on RT for pACC and possibly provides first evidence to justify its use in this setting.
Materials and methods
We searched the PubMed and Embase database for manuscripts regarding RT for pACC.
Results
We included 17 manuscripts reporting on 76 patients treated with RT, after screening 2961 references and 269 full articles. In addition, we added data of 4 unreported pACC patients treated by co-authors. All reports based on retrospective data. Median age at first diagnosis was 11.1 years (70% female); 78% of patients presented with hormonal activity. RT was mostly performed for curative intent (78%). 88% of RT were administered during primary therapy. The site of RT was predominantly the local tumor bed (76%). Doses of RT ranged from 15 to 62 Gy (median 50 Gy). Information on target volumes or fractionation were lacking. Median follow-up was 6,9 years and 64% of the patients died of disease, with 33% alive without disease. In 16 of 48 patients with available follow-up data after adjuvant RT (33%) no recurrence was reported and in 3 of 9 patients palliative RT seemed to induce some benefit for the patient.
Conclusions
Our first systematic review on RT for pACC provides too few data for any general recommendation, but adjuvant RT in patients with high risk might be considered. International collaborative studies are urgently needed to establish better evidence on the role of RT in this rare malignancy.
Background
Multiple myeloma (MM) is the third most common hematologic malignancy with increasing importance due to improving treatment strategies and long-term outcomes in an aging population. This study aims to analyse influencing factors on health-related quality of life (HRQoL), such as treatment strategies, participation in a clinical trial and patient characteristics like anxiety, depression, gender, and age. A better understanding of the individual factors in context with HRQoL could provide a helpful instrument for clinical decisions.
Methods
In this prospective observational study, the HRQoL of MM patients with different therapies (first-line and relapse) was quantified by standardized questionnaires (EORTC QLQ-C30 and -MY20) in the context of sociodemographic data, individual anxiety and depressiveness (PHQ-4), and a selected number of clinical parameters and symptoms at defined time-points before, during, and after therapy.
Results
In total, 70 patients were included in the study. The median age of the study cohort was 62 years. 44% were female and 56% were male patients. More than half of the patients were fully active with an ECOG 0. Global health status was significantly higher in patients with first-line treatment and even increased after start of therapy, while the pain level decreased. In contrast, patients with relapsed MM reported a decreasing global health status and increasing pain. Additionally, there was a higher global health status in less anxious/depressive patients. HRQoL decreased significantly after start of chemotherapy in the parameters body image, side effects of treatment, and cognitive functioning. Tandem stem-cell transplantation was not found to be a risk factor for higher impairment of HRQoL. Participation in a clinical study led to an improvement of most aspects of HRQoL. Among others, increased anxiety and depression, female gender, older age, impaired performance status, and recurrent disease can be early indicators for a reduced HRQoL.
Conclusion
This study showed the importance of regular longitudinal assessments of patient reported outcomes (PROs) in routine clinical care. For the first time, to our knowledge, we were able to demonstrate a potential impact between participation in clinical trials and HRQoL. However, due to frequently restrictive inclusion criteria for clinical trials, these MM patients might not be directly comparable with patients treated within standard therapy concepts. Further studies are needed to clarify the relevance of this preliminary data in order to develop an individualized, patient-centred, therapy concept.
Background
The plasticity of T helper-17 (Th17) and regulatory T (Treg) cells may be a clue to pathogenesis of Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA). It is still unclear, whether targeted suppression of Interleukin (IL)-17 is able to influence regulatory function of Treg to control pro-inflammatory effectors in JIA. This study aimed to assess the effect of a Th17-stimulating cytokine environment and of IL-17A-inhibition on phenotype plasticity and suppressive function of Treg derived from JIA patients.
Methods
Th17 and Treg characteristics of CD4\(^{+}\) helper T cells were investigated in blood samples of JIA patients with oligo- and polyarticular pattern and healthy controls (HC). Isolated CD4\(^{+}\)CD25\(^{+}\)CD127\(^{-}\) cells defined as Treg were cultivated with Th17-inducing cytokine environment as well as with IL-17A-inhibitors and analyzed for plasticity of phenotype by flow cytometry. Furthermore, inhibitory function of Treg on autologous effectors after cultivation with these stimuli was determined by suppression assays.
Results
Our findings demonstrated significantly elevated proportions of Th17 and Th17-like Treg in JIA compared to HC. After incubation with Th17-inducing stimuli, increased FoxP3 expression in separated Treg in JIA and an impaired suppressive capacity in JIA and HC were found. Blockade of IL-17A resulted in adjustment of FoxP3-expression in JIA to proportions found in controls and in regular suppressive function.
Conclusions
Our results demonstrate an induction of FoxP3 expressing Treg by Th17-inducing cytokines with concomitant mitigated suppressive function. In contrast, specific IL-17A blockade maintains suppressive Treg function and adjusted FoxP3-expression in JIA to levels found in controls. These findings may help to provide experimental evidence for the successful clinical use of IL-17A inhibition in JIA patients.
Background
In individuals suffering from a rare disease the diagnostic process and the confirmation of a final diagnosis often extends over many years. Factors contributing to delayed diagnosis include health care professionals' limited knowledge of rare diseases and frequent (co-)occurrence of mental disorders that may complicate and delay the diagnostic process. The ZSE-DUO study aims to assess the benefits of a combination of a physician focusing on somatic aspects with a mental health expert working side by side as a tandem in the diagnostic process.
Study design
This multi-center, prospective controlled study has a two-phase cohort design.
Methods
Two cohorts of 682 patients each are sequentially recruited from 11 university-based German Centers for Rare Diseases (CRD): the standard care cohort (control, somatic expertise only) and the innovative care cohort (experimental, combined somatic and mental health expertise). Individuals aged 12 years and older presenting with symptoms and signs which are not explained by current diagnoses will be included. Data will be collected prior to the first visit to the CRD’s outpatient clinic (T0), at the first visit (T1) and 12 months thereafter (T2).
Outcomes
Primary outcome is the percentage of patients with one or more confirmed diagnoses covering the symptomatic spectrum presented. Sample size is calculated to detect a 10 percent increase from 30% in standard care to 40% in the innovative dual expert cohort. Secondary outcomes are (a) time to diagnosis/diagnoses explaining the symptomatology; (b) proportion of patients successfully referred from CRD to standard care; (c) costs of diagnosis including incremental cost effectiveness ratios; (d) predictive value of screening instruments administered at T0 to identify patients with mental disorders; (e) patients’ quality of life and evaluation of care; and f) physicians’ satisfaction with the innovative care approach.
Conclusions
This is the first multi-center study to investigate the effects of a mental health specialist working in tandem with a somatic expert physician in CRDs. If this innovative approach proves successful, it will be made available on a larger scale nationally and promoted internationally. In the best case, ZSE-DUO can significantly shorten the time to diagnosis for a suspected rare disease.
Eine intrauterine Infektion ist eine ernstzunehmende Erkrankung mit möglicherweise schwerwiegenden Folgen für den Feten. Frühgeborene, die einer Chorioamnionitis ausgesetzt waren, haben jedoch eine geringere Mortalitätsrate mit biochemischen und strukturellen Veränderungen während der Lungenentwicklung.
Vorhergehende experimentelle Arbeiten belegen die Initiierung einer Lungenreifung durch intraamniotisch verabreichtes Lipopolysaccharid. Hierbei wurde durch Aspiration der Amnionflüssigkeit eine fetale pulmonale Inflammationsreaktion in Gang gesetzt.
Die Hypothese der vorliegenden Arbeit lautete, dass eine durch intravenös appliziertes Lipopolysaccharid induzierte fetale systemische Inflammation die intrauterine Lungenreifung ebenfalls beeinflusst.
Die im Rahmen dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Versuche erfolgten an 21 fetalen Schafen mit einem Gestationsalter von 107 Tagen. Alle Tiere wurden zunächst mit intrauterinen Kathetern versehen. Nach einer Erholungsphase von 3 Tagen erhielten die Kontrolltiere (N=12) Kochsalzlösung und die Tiere der Versuchsgruppe (N=9) 100ng Lipopolysaccharid intravenös. Lungenstruktur und Lungenreifung der fetalen Schafe wurden mittels biochemischer und histologischer Untersuchungen nach 3 (N=5) und nach 7 (N=4) Tagen beurteilt.
Die Infusion der Lipopolysaccharidlösung hatte zumindest innerhalb des Versuchszeitraums keinen Einfluss auf das Körpergewicht des Feten. Die systemische Entzündung trägt jedoch zu einer pränatalen Verletzung mit strukturellen pulmonalen Veränderungen bei. Sowohl eine Lungenreifung als auch eine gestörte strukturelle Lungenentwicklung traten nach einer kurzfristigen fetalen Inflammation ein.
Die Konzentration an Interleukin-6 in der bronchoalveolären Lavage stieg 3 Tage nach Applikation des Lipopolysaccharids mehr als 40fach an. Sowohl die Prozessierung von Pro-Surfactant Protein (SP)-B zu reifem SP-B als auch erhöhte Konzentrationen an SP-B konnten nach 7 Tagen nachgewiesen werden. Ebenfalls war eine Steigerung des phosphorylierten STAT-3 im Lungengewebe zu erkennen. Die Ablagerung von Elastinfasern an Septierungsstellen der Alveolen wurde innerhalb von 3 Tagen nach Lipopolysaccharidapplikation negativ beeinflusst.
Aus den Erkenntnissen dieser Arbeit könnten neue Therapieansätze sowohl für das Atemnotsyndrom des Frühgeborenen als auch der bronchopulmonalen Dysplasie resultieren, die eine Modulation der Entzündungsreaktion zum Ziel haben. Alle therapeutischen Ansätze werden einen Weg zwischen den positiven Effekten der Lungenreifung mit gesteigerter Compliance, reduzierter Alveolarwanddicke und vermehrtem prozessiertem SP-B und den schädlichen Einwirkungen auf die Lungenstruktur mit veränderter Elastinverteilung und kapillärer Leckage finden müssen. Bedauerlicherweise können die erhobenen Daten nicht klären, ob die einmalige Infusion von LPS eine anhaltende oder permanente Störung der alveolären Entwicklung hervorbringt. Die strukturellen Veränderungen des Lungengewebes, die denen einer BPD ähneln, lassen jedoch eine permanente Organschädigung befürchten.
Background
Influenza virus infections in immunologically naïve children (primary infection) may be more severe than in children with re-infections who are already immunologically primed. We compared frequency and severity of influenza virus primary and re-infections in pre-school children requiring outpatient treatment.
Methods
Influenza-unvaccinated children 1–5 years of age presenting at pediatric practices with febrile acute respiratory infection < 48 h after symptom onset were enrolled in a prospective, cross-sectional, multicenter surveillance study (2013–2015). Influenza types/subtypes were PCR-confirmed from oropharyngeal swabs. Influenza type/subtype-specific IgG antibodies serving as surrogate markers for immunological priming were determined using ELISA/hemagglutination inhibition assays. The acute influenza disease was defined as primary infection/re-infection by the absence/presence of influenza type-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) and, in a second approach, by the absence/presence of subtype-specific IgG. Socio-demographic and clinical data were also recorded.
Results
Of 217 influenza infections, 178 were due to influenza A (87 [49%] primary infections, 91 [51%] re-infections) and 39 were due to influenza B (38 [97%] primary infections, one [3%] re-infection). Children with “influenza A primary infections” showed fever with respiratory symptoms for a shorter period than children with “influenza A re-infections” (median 3 vs. 4 days; age-adjusted p = 0.03); other disease characteristics were similar. If primary infections and re-infections were defined based on influenza A subtypes, 122 (87%) primary infections (78 “A(H3N2) primary infections”, 44 “A(H1N1)pdm09 primary infections”) and 18 (13%) re-infections could be classified (14 “A(H3N2) re-infections” and 4 “A(H1N1)pdm09 re-infections”). Per subtype, primary infections and re-infections were of similar disease severity. Children with re-infections defined on the subtype level usually had non-protective IgG titers against the subtype of their acute infection (16 of 18; 89%). Some patients infected by one of the influenza A subtypes showed protective IgG titers (≥ 1:40) against the other influenza A subtype (32/140; 23%).
Conclusions
Pre-school children with acute influenza A primary infections and re-infections presented with similar frequency in pediatric practices. Contrary to expectation, severity of acute “influenza A primary infections” and “influenza A re-infections” were similar. Most “influenza A re-infections” defined on the type level turned out to be primary infections when defined based on the subtype. On the subtype level, re-infections were rare and of similar disease severity as primary infections of the same subtype. Subtype level re-infections were usually associated with low IgG levels for the specific subtype of the acute infection, suggesting only short-time humoral immunity induced by previous infection by this subtype. Overall, the results indicated recurring influenza virus infections in this age group and no or only limited heterosubtypic antibody-mediated cross-protection.
Chorioamnionitis is associated with an increased risk of preterm birth and aggravates adverse outcomes such as BPD. Development of BPD is associated with chronic inflammatory reactions and oxidative stress in the airways which may be antenatally initiated by chorioamnionitis. A20 is an immunomodulatory protein involved in the negative feedback regulation of inflammatory reactions and is a possible regulator protein in oxidative stress reactions. The influence of chorioamnionitis on A20 gene regulation in the fetal lung is unknown. We characterized the influence of LPS and proinflammatory cytokines on A20 expression in human lung endothelial (HPMEC-ST1.6R) and epithelial (A549) cells in vitro by real-time PCR and/or western blotting and used a sheep model of LPS-induced chorioamnionitis for in vivo studies. To study the functional role of A20, endogenous A20 was overexpressed in HPMEC-ST1.6R and A549 cells. LPS induced proinflammatory cytokines in HPMEC-ST1.6R and A549 cells. Both LPS and/or proinflammatory cytokines elevated A20 at transcriptional and translational levels. Intra-amniotic LPS transiently increased IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α mRNA levels in fetal lamb lungs, associated with an increase in A20 mRNA and protein levels. Overexpression of A20 reduced proinflammatory cytokines in vitro. Repeated LPS exposure induced LPS tolerance for proinflammatory cytokines and A20 in vitro and in vivo. Antenatal inflammation induced a transient increase in proinflammatory cytokines in the preterm fetal lung. The expression of proinflammatory cytokines increased expression of A20. Elevated A20 may have a protective role by downregulating chorioamnionitis-triggered fetal lung inflammation. A20 may be a novel target for pharmacological interventions to prevent chorioamnionitis-induced airway inflammation and lung damage, which can result in BPD later in life.