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1.
Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ; 22(1): 46, 2024 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38671480

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The clinical relevance of different antiphospholipid antibody (aPL) profiles, including low level anticardiolipin (aCL) and anti-ß2-glycoprotein-I (aß2GPI) antibodies, is ill-defined in the pediatric population. Our purpose is to describe the demographic, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of aPL positive pediatric patients based on different aPL profiles. FINDINGS: In this single center retrospective cohort study, based on the screening of our pediatric (age ≤ 18) rheumatology electronic medical records (2016-2022), we identified patients who had at least one "positive" aPL (lupus anticoagulant [LA], aCL IgG/M, or aß2GPI IgG/M) result. Patients were grouped into high- (LA positive and/or aCL/aß2GPI IgG/M > 40U [ELISA]) and low-risk (LA negative and aCL/aß2GPI IgG/M 20-39U) aPL profiles; those with persistently positive aPL were descriptively analyzed for demographic and clinical characteristics. Of 57 included patients, 34 (59%) had initial high- and 23 (40%) had initial low-risk profiles. Based on subsequent aPL results available in 42/57 (74%) patients, 25/27 (93%) in the high-, and 7/15 (47%) in the low-risk groups remained still positive. Of these 32 patients with persistently positive aPL, moderate-to-large vessel or microvascular thrombosis occurred in nine (28%) patients with high-risk and in none with low-risk aPL profiles; non-thrombotic aPL-related manifestations were reported in 15 (47%) patients with persistent aPL positivity. CONCLUSION: An initial high-risk aPL profile was persistent in approximately 90% of our cohort, a third of whom had thrombosis, and half had non-thrombotic aPL manifestations. Our results underscore the need for a large-scale effort to better characterize aPL-related manifestations in pediatric patients with persistent high-risk aPL-profiles.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Anticardiolipin , Antibodies, Antiphospholipid , beta 2-Glycoprotein I , Humans , Female , Male , Child , Retrospective Studies , Antibodies, Antiphospholipid/blood , Antibodies, Antiphospholipid/immunology , Adolescent , beta 2-Glycoprotein I/immunology , Antibodies, Anticardiolipin/blood , Antibodies, Anticardiolipin/immunology , Antiphospholipid Syndrome/immunology , Antiphospholipid Syndrome/blood , Antiphospholipid Syndrome/diagnosis , Antiphospholipid Syndrome/complications , Child, Preschool , Lupus Coagulation Inhibitor/blood , Lupus Coagulation Inhibitor/immunology , Rheumatic Diseases/immunology , Rheumatic Diseases/blood , Thrombosis/etiology , Thrombosis/immunology , Clinical Relevance
2.
Cureus ; 9(6): e1395, 2017 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28845374

ABSTRACT

Atrial fibrillation is a heart arrhythmia associated with increased risk for ischemic stroke. Vitamin K antagonists were developed to decrease a patient's clotting risk; however, these medications require therapeutic monitoring and have several drug interactions. Novel oral anticoagulants (NOACs) were developed as an alternative to vitamin K antagonists and several studies have evaluated the ability of NOAC to decrease clotting as well as the risk of major bleeding in comparison to vitamin K antagonists, such as warfarin. This study has found that NOACs are as effective as warfarin in reducing stroke and systemic embolism through anticoagulation. Notably, NOACs have a decreased risk of significant bleeding and other secondary adverse events.

3.
Immunol Cell Biol ; 92(2): 116-23, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24217810

ABSTRACT

Dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy has recently demonstrated a great potential for clinical applications; however, additional progress in the methods of tumor-specific antigen delivery to DCs is necessary for the further development of anti-tumor vaccines. To this end, a capsid-optimized adeno-associated virus serotype 6 (AAV6-T492V+S663V) vector was developed by site-directed mutagenesis of surface-exposed serine (S) and threonine (T) residues, which have a critical role in intracellular trafficking of AAV vectors. This double-mutant AAV6 vector had ∼ 5-fold greater transduction efficiency in monocyte-derived DCs (moDCs) compared with wild-type (WT)-AAV6 vectors. The increase in the transduction efficiency correlated with the improved nuclear translocation of AAV6-T492V+S663V over that of the WT-AAV6 vector. Additional studies of the CD11c promoter identified critical regulatory elements that fit into the AAV expression cassette and drive EGFP expression in moDCs. Development of a chimeric promoter (chmCD11c) that contains functional modules of CD11c and a Simian virus (SV40) enhancer element dramatically increased the EGFP expression in moDCs. MoDCs transduced by the capsid-optimized AAV6 vector carrying human prostate-specific antigen (hPSA) driven by CBA (AAV6-T492V+S663V-CBA-hPSA) or chmCd11c (AAV6-T492V+S663V-chmCD11c-hPSA) generated specific T-cell clone proliferation and superior cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) with higher killing capability against human prostate adenocarcinoma cells, LNCaP, compared with WT-AAV6 induced CTLs. Taken together, these studies suggest that optimization of capsid and promoter components of AAV vectors can be a useful approach for efficient targeting of moDCs and may prove to be a promising tool for cancer immunotherapy.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/therapy , Capsid/immunology , Dendritic Cells/immunology , Dependovirus , Genetic Vectors , Immunotherapy/methods , Prostatic Neoplasms/therapy , Transgenes , Adenocarcinoma/genetics , Adenocarcinoma/immunology , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Male , Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics , Prostatic Neoplasms/immunology
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