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Diversity-Related, Student-Led National Medical Organizations: Leadership Opportunities for Learners

Brutus, Nicholas N; Spencer, Dennis J; Huell, Derek; Astudillo, Yaritzy M; Ott, Austen; Lee, Joyce H; Calac, Alex; Sánchez, John P
INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:In light of the lack of diversity in academic medicine leadership, diversity-related, student-led national medical organizations (NMOs) provide a space for solace and reprieve among common peers while providing an opportunity to develop leadership competencies in a supportive environment. Despite the impact NMOs have had on cultivating generations of leaders in medicine, trainees may not identify opportunities for leadership development that are transferable to future careers in academic medicine. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:We designed and implemented a dynamic 60-minute workshop with an interactive PowerPoint presentation, author-owned video testimonials (from past student leaders of NMOs), two case presentations, and reflection exercises. We assessed learner self-perceived confidence via workshop surveys. The target audience of this module was medical trainees, including medical students, residents, and fellows. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Forty-three workshop attendees across three sites submitted partial or complete survey evaluations. Respondents included medical students (77%), with the remainder self-identified as either postbaccalaureate students, residents/fellows, academic faculty, or physicians. A comparison of pre- and postresponses showed a statistically significant increase in confidence in addressing each of the four educational objectives. Participants felt the case presentations offered relevant applicable examples. DISCUSSION/UNASSIGNED:For many trainees, the role that diversity-related NMOs play in developing leadership competencies may be unclear and not articulated in traditional medical curricula. In this module, we provide examples of how NMOs facilitate leadership development and may encourage our diverse trainees to eventually become academic faculty.
PMCID:11671812
PMID: 39735709
ISSN: 2374-8265
CID: 5779202

Tips and Tricks for Image-Guided Breast Biopsies: Technical Factors for Success

Dodelzon, Katerina; Grimm, Lars; Coffey, Kristen; Reig, Beatriu; Mullen, Lisa; Dashevsky, Brittany Z; Bhole, Sonya; Parikh, Jay
Image-guided biopsy is an integral step in the diagnosis and management of suspicious image-detected breast or axillary lesions, allowing for accurate diagnosis and, if indicated, treatment planning. Tissue sampling can be performed under guidance of a full spectrum of breast imaging modalities, including stereotactic, tomosynthesis, sonographic, and MRI, each with its own set of advantages and limitations. Procedural planning, which includes consideration of technical, patient, and lesion factors, is vital for diagnostic accuracy and limitation of complications. The purpose of this paper is to review and provide guidance for breast imaging radiologists in selecting the best procedural approach for the individual patient to ensure accurate diagnosis and optimal patient outcomes. Common patient and lesion factors that may affect successful sampling and contribute to postbiopsy complications are reviewed and include obesity, limited patient mobility, patient motion, patients prone to vasovagal reactions, history of anticoagulation, and lesion location, such as proximity to vital structures or breast implant.
PMID: 39313444
ISSN: 2631-6129
CID: 5778172

Barriers and Facilitators to Vaccine Equity Amidst the COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout in the United States

Piltch-Loeb, Rachael; Nuñez Sahr, Josefina; Nelson, LaRon E; Vlahov, David; Gershon, Robyn R
State and local health departments were responsible for ensuring equitable distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine. This qualitative study aimed to identify the challenges, strategies, disappointments, and successes in achieving equity for hard-to-reach and at-risk populations. Using a purposive sampling strategy, 16 individuals affiliated with health departments across nine states, each holding leadership roles in vaccine distribution, were interviewed between late 2021 and mid-2022. The key factors promoting vaccine equity included (1) inviting community members to serve on vaccine advisory groups to participate in decision-making; (2) utilizing pre-existing community relationships and spaces to facilitate the planning and distribution of the vaccine; and (3) establishing and building upon community outreach to support accessibility and uptake of the vaccine. The barriers included (1) a lack of clarity on vaccine prioritization criteria; (2) language/communication access; and (3) the initial focus on mass vaccination sites for vaccine delivery. The stakeholders also highlighted potential facilitators for increasing equity in future vaccine rollouts. Overall, community engagement emerged as a critical factor in ensuring equity during disaster response efforts.
PMCID:11675886
PMID: 39767429
ISSN: 1660-4601
CID: 5779422

Association of Problematic Internet Use With Psychotic Experiences and Depression in Adolescents: A Cohort Study

Narita, Zui; Ando, Shuntaro; Yamasaki, Syudo; Miyashita, Mitsuhiro; DeVylder, Jordan; Yamaguchi, Satoshi; Hosozawa, Mariko; Nakanishi, Miharu; Hiraiwa-Hasegawa, Mariko; Furukawa, Toshiaki A; Kasai, Kiyoto; Nishida, Atsushi
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESIS:Problematic internet use (PIU) is prevalent among adolescents. Past research suggested cross-sectional associations between PIU and psychotic experiences, but little information is available on the longitudinal association. We hypothesized that PIU in adolescence may be longitudinally associated with psychotic experiences, adjusting for confounders. STUDY DESIGN:We analyzed a random sample of adolescents in the Tokyo Teen Cohort to examine how PIU at ages 10 (2012-2015), 12 (2014-2017), and 16 (2019-2021) was associated with mental health issues at age 16. PIU was evaluated by the modified Compulsive Internet Use Scale, psychotic experiences by the Adolescent Psychotic-like Symptom Screener, and depression by the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire. We also examined the mediating role of social withdrawal. STUDY RESULTS:We analyzed 3171 adolescents; 151 reported psychotic experiences and 327 reported depression at age 16. Compared with the lowest tertile PIU group, the highest tertile PIU group at age 12 showed an increased adjusted risk of psychotic experiences (RD 3.3%, 95% CI 2.9%-3.7%; RR 1.65, 95% CI 1.55-1.73) and depression (RD 5.9%, 95% CI 5.5%-6.3%; RR 1.61, 95% CI 1.55-1.68) at age 16. PIU at age 16 showed analogous results, while PIU at age 10 suggested a smaller impact. Social withdrawal mediated 9.4%-29.0% of the association between PIU and psychotic experiences. CONCLUSIONS:PIU is longitudinally associated with psychotic experiences and depression in adolescents. Further longitudinal and intervention studies are warranted to provide robust public health implications and foster a safer digital future.
PMCID:11661944
PMID: 38825582
ISSN: 1745-1701
CID: 5779382

Malate initiates a proton-sensing pathway essential for pH regulation of inflammation

Chen, Yu-Jia-Nan; Shi, Rong-Chen; Xiang, Yuan-Cai; Fan, Li; Tang, Hong; He, Gang; Zhou, Mei; Feng, Xin-Zhe; Tan, Jin-Dong; Huang, Pan; Ye, Xiao; Zhao, Kun; Fu, Wen-Yu; Li, Liu-Li; Bian, Xu-Ting; Chen, Huan; Wang, Feng; Wang, Teng; Zhang, Chen-Ke; Zhou, Bing-Hua; Chen, Wan; Liang, Tao-Tao; Lv, Jing-Tong; Kang, Xia; Shi, You-Xing; Kim, Ellen; Qin, Yin-Hua; Hettinghouse, Aubryanna; Wang, Kai-di; Zhao, Xiang-Li; Yang, Ming-Yu; Tang, Yu-Zhen; Piao, Hai-Long; Guo, Lin; Liu, Chuan-Ju; Miao, Hong-Ming; Tang, Kang-Lai
Metabolites can double as a signaling modality that initiates physiological adaptations. Metabolism, a chemical language encoding biological information, has been recognized as a powerful principle directing inflammatory responses. Cytosolic pH is a regulator of inflammatory response in macrophages. Here, we found that L-malate exerts anti-inflammatory effect via BiP-IRF2BP2 signaling, which is a sensor of cytosolic pH in macrophages. First, L-malate, a TCA intermediate upregulated in pro-inflammatory macrophages, was identified as a potent anti-inflammatory metabolite through initial screening. Subsequent screening with DARTS and MS led to the isolation of L-malate-BiP binding. Further screening through protein‒protein interaction microarrays identified a L-malate-restrained coupling of BiP with IRF2BP2, a known anti-inflammatory protein. Interestingly, pH reduction, which promotes carboxyl protonation of L-malate, facilitates L-malate and carboxylate analogues such as succinate to bind BiP, and disrupt BiP-IRF2BP2 interaction in a carboxyl-dependent manner. Both L-malate and acidification inhibit BiP-IRF2BP2 interaction, and protect IRF2BP2 from BiP-driven degradation in macrophages. Furthermore, both in vitro and in vivo, BiP-IRF2BP2 signal is required for effects of both L-malate and pH on inflammatory responses. These findings reveal a previously unrecognized, proton/carboxylate dual sensing pathway wherein pH and L-malate regulate inflammatory responses, indicating the role of certain carboxylate metabolites as adaptors in the proton biosensing by interactions between macromolecules.
PMCID:11683149
PMID: 39737965
ISSN: 2059-3635
CID: 5779222

"See Your Dentist Twice a Year" - What is its origin? [Historical Article]

Spielman, Andrew
"See Your Dentist Twice a Year" is the standard of care today honored by dentists, requested by patients, and covered by insurance. Where is the scientific evidence to support this dictate? Several systematic reviews could find no support for or against it. When did it start? This paper traces the timeline of the statement and its appearance in toothpaste advertisements. It was first spotted in 1890 as part of a household guide for beauty preservation. Subsequently, the idea became a tagline in dental advertisements for Colgate Ribbon Toothpaste, Dr. Lyon's Dentifrice from 1913, and Pepsodent toothpaste starting in 1926.
PMID: 39786960
ISSN: 1089-6287
CID: 5779452

Crystallization by microwave energy: Effects on the survival probability of lithia-based glass ceramics

Diamantino, Pedro Santos; Rodrigues, Camila da Silva; Carvalho, Ana Beatriz Gomes de; Tribst, João Paulo Mendes; Riquieri, Hilton; Ramos, Nathália de Carvalho; Viegas, Diogo Miguel da Costa Cabecinha Pacheco; Bergamo, Edmara Tatiely Pedroso; Bonfante, Estevam Augusto; Saavedra, Guilherme de Siqueira Ferreira Anzaloni
This study evaluated the survival probabilities of two lithia-based glass-ceramics after final crystallization in a microwave furnace using conventional crystallization as a reference. Disc-shaped samples of a lithium silicate (LS, Celtra Duo) and a lithium disilicate (LD, e.max CAD) were prepared and divided into two groups according to the crystallization method (n = 30): microwave (M) or conventional furnaces (C). The biaxial flexural strength test was used to determine the fatigue test profile and its parameters. Then, specimens were submitted to an accelerated life test (step stress) using three profile levels - mild, moderate, and aggressive - varying the load increments and the number of cycles until fracture (4 Hz). Survival data were used to calculate Weibull's beta (β) value and reliability of the assigned missions. Scanning electron microscopy was employed to analyze surface morphology, fracture characteristics, and failure patterns. Beta (β) values for the LS-C, LS-M, LD-C, and LD-M groups were 2.65, 0.25, 0.62, and 0.3, respectively. Similar reliability was observed in all groups after 50,000 cycles at 100 and 150 Mpa. At 200 Mpa, the crystallization method did not affect the reliability within LS or LD. However, LD showed greater reliability than LS when crystallized by microwave energy. Thus, microwave energy can be suggested as an alternative to the process of conventional lithia-based glass-ceramics crystallization without damaging their survival probabilities.
PMID: 39775416
ISSN: 1807-3107
CID: 5779442

Neoadjuvant anti-PD1 immunotherapy for surgically accessible recurrent glioblastoma: clinical and molecular outcomes of a stage 2 single-arm expansion cohort

McFaline-Figueroa, J Ricardo; Sun, Lu; Youssef, Gilbert C; Huang, Raymond; Li, Gang; Kim, Jiyoon; Lee, Eudocia Q; Nayak, Lakshmi; Chukwueke, Ugonma; Beroukhim, Rameen; Batchelor, Tracy T; Chiocca, E Antonio; Everson, Richard G; Doherty, Lisa; Stefanik, Jennifer; Partridge, Kathryn; Spearman, Amanda; Myers, Alexa; Westergaard, Catharina; Russ, Alyssa; Lavallee, Maria; Smokovich, Anna; LaForest-Roys, Corey; Garcia Fox, Rachel; McCluskey, Christine; Bi, Wenya Linda; Arnaout, Omar; Peruzzi, PierPaolo; Cosgrove, G Rees; Ligon, Keith L; Arrillaga-Romany, Isabel; Clarke, Jennifer L; Reardon, David A; Cloughesy, Timothy F; Prins, Robert M; Wen, Patrick Y
Glioblastoma is immunologically "cold" and resistant to single-agent immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Our previous study of neoadjuvant pembrolizumab in surgically-accessible recurrent glioblastoma identified a molecular signature of response to ICI and suggested that neoadjuvant pembrolizumab may improve survival. To increase the power of this observation, we enrolled an additional 25 patients with a primary endpoint of evaluating the cell cycle gene signature associated with neoadjuvant pembrolizumab and performed bulk-RNA seq on resected tumor tissue (NCT02852655). Neoadjuvant pembrolizumab was associated with suppression of cell cycle/cancer proliferation genes and upregulation of T-cell/interferon-related gene expression. This signature was unique to patients treated with neoadjuvant pembrolizumab and was an independent positive risk factor for survival. Our results demonstrate a clear pharmacodynamic effect of anti-PD1 therapy in glioblastoma and identify pathways that may mediate resistance. However, we did not confirm a survival benefit to neoadjuvant pembrolizumab in recurrent glioblastoma and our secondary endpoint of PFS-6 was 19.5% (95% CI: 9.29-41.2%) for the pooled neoadjuvant cohorts. Our new data suggests some patients may exhibit innate resistance to pre-surgical ICI and require other concomitant therapies to sensitize effectively.
PMCID:11685579
PMID: 39737895
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5779212

Higher abdominal fat area associates with lower donor kidney function before and after living kidney donation

Westenberg, Lisa B; van Londen, Marco; Zorgdrager, Marcel; McAdams-DeMarco, Mara A; Segev, Dorry L; Bakker, Stephan J L; Viddeleer, Alain R; Pol, Robert A
Central body fat distribution affects kidney function. Abdominal fat measurements using computed tomography (CT) may prove superior in assessing body composition-related kidney risk in living kidney donors. This retrospective cohort study including 550 kidney donors aimed to determine the association between CT-measured abdominal fat areas and kidney function before and after donor nephrectomy. Donors underwent glomerular filtration rate measurements (125I-Iothalamate, mGFR) before and 3 months after donation. Linear regression analyses with body surface area (BSA)-standardized and crude mGFR were performed to assess the association of height-indexed tomographic fat measurements with kidney function. In age-, and sex-adjusted analyses higher levels of total abdominal, visceral, subcutaneous, and intramuscular adipose tissue index were significantly associated with lower mGFR levels before donation (BSA-standardized mGFR: visceral adipose tissue index: Βeta=-0.11, p < 0.001, subcutaneous: Βeta=-0.10, p < 0.001, intramuscular: Βeta=-1.18, p < 0.001, total abdominal: Βeta=-0.07, p < 0.001). Higher tomographic abdominal fat is associated with lower BSA-standardized mGFR after donation and a greater decrease in mGFR between screening and 3 months post-donation. This study shows that CT-measured abdominal fat area is associated with kidney function before and after living kidney donation.
PMCID:11682065
PMID: 39733114
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 5779192

Genetic architecture reconciles linkage and association studies of complex traits

Sidorenko, Julia; Couvy-Duchesne, Baptiste; Kemper, Kathryn E; Moen, Gunn-Helen; Bhatta, Laxmi; Åsvold, Bjørn Olav; Mägi, Reedik; ,; Ani, Alireza; Wang, Rujia; Nolte, Ilja M; ,; Gordon, Scott; Hayward, Caroline; Campbell, Archie; Benjamin, Daniel J; Cesarini, David; Evans, David M; Goddard, Michael E; Haley, Chris S; Porteous, David; Medland, Sarah E; Martin, Nicholas G; Snieder, Harold; Metspalu, Andres; Hveem, Kristian; Brumpton, Ben; Visscher, Peter M; Yengo, Loic
Linkage studies have successfully mapped loci underlying monogenic disorders, but mostly failed when applied to common diseases. Conversely, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified replicable associations between thousands of SNPs and complex traits, yet capture less than half of the total heritability. In the present study we reconcile these two approaches by showing that linkage signals of height and body mass index (BMI) from 119,000 sibling pairs colocalize with GWAS-identified loci. Concordant with polygenicity, we observed the following: a genome-wide inflation of linkage test statistics; that GWAS results predict linkage signals; and that adjusting phenotypes for polygenic scores reduces linkage signals. Finally, we developed a method using recombination rate-stratified, identity-by-descent sharing between siblings to unbiasedly estimate heritability of height (0.76 ± 0.05) and BMI (0.55 ± 0.07). Our results imply that substantial heritability remains unaccounted for by GWAS-identified loci and this residual genetic variation is polygenic and enriched near these loci.
PMID: 39375568
ISSN: 1546-1718
CID: 5779392