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Tag: Newswise

  • Stuart Therapeutics Announces Chief Medical and Chief Financial Officer Appointments

    Stuart Therapeutics Announces Chief Medical and Chief Financial Officer Appointments


     

    STUART, Fla.Feb. 1, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Stuart Therapeutics, Inc. (“Stuart”), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company with candidate therapeutics in various phases of clinical development, today announced that it has appointed Jodi Luchs, MD to the position of Chief Medical Officer, and Don Stires to the position of Chief Financial Officer. 

    With the appointment of Dr. Luchs, Robert Baratta, MD has stepped aside from his current role as Chief Medical Officer but will continue as Stuart’s Executive Chairman of the Board.

    “Stuart Therapeutics’ growth, international operations and increase in pipeline opportunities require an expansion of our team and capabilities,” said Eric Schlumpf, President and Chief Executive Officer of Stuart. “Jodi and Don bring significant clinical and industry experience and expertise to our organization, and we are pleased that they will be a part of our future as an organization. Dr. Baratta remains an active part of the company and our culture, and we count on his continued contribution to the development of innovative therapeutics in ophthalmology.”

    Jodi Luchs, MD 

    Dr. Luchs graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and received his M.D. from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. He completed an internship at the Mount Sinai Medical Center, and his Ophthalmology residency at Long Island Jewish Medical Center. He then completed a fellowship in Cornea/External Disease at the prestigious Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelphia. In 2018, Dr. Luchs Joined Florida Vision Institute in West Palm Beach, Florida.

    He has numerous publications on Cornea, External Diseases, and Refractive Surgery to his credit, including 2 books, and lectures nationally, and internationally. He has been the Principal Investigator for over 100 FDA clinical trials, including those which led to the approval of many ophthalmic medications and devices used today. 

    Dr. Luchs is Board Certified by the American Board of Ophthalmology, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the American College of Surgeons, and the American Society of Cataract and refractive Surgery (ASCRS). He is also a member of the Castroviejo Corneal Society, the International Society of Refractive Surgery, the Refractive Surgery Alliance, and a founding member of both the American-European Congress of Ophthalmic Surgery (AECOS) and the Society of Cornea, External Disease and Refractive Surgeons (CEDARS).

    In 2017, Dr. Luchs became the Chief Science Advisor for InFocus Capital Partners, a private venture capital firm dedicated to investing in companies developing promising new Ophthalmic medications and devices.

    Donald H. Stires, Jr. 

    Donald (Don) Stires graduated from Lehigh University with a Civil Engineering degree and has an MBA from Columbia University. He has over 40 years of management experience with global medical device, pharmaceutical, and consumer products companies as well as small company start-ups. He has extensive finance and accounting management experience from his background with the Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies, including Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson Interventional Systems, and Cordis, Inc.

    Don’s broad background includes key roles in finance and accounting, including controller and CFO, along with general management roles including CEO of an early-stage medical diagnostic technology company. 

    About Stuart Therapeutics
    Stuart Therapeutics, founded in 2017 and based in Stuart, Florida, is the leader in the development of ECM-targeting therapeutics for disease treatment. Its platform technology, PolyCol™, is a portfolio of synthesized collagen mimetic peptides designed to specifically bind to and repair disease- or injury-damaged helical collagen structures. This activity results in both a repair of collagen structures and a restoration of homeostatic cell signaling, with positive effects on cell growth and proliferation and reduction in inflammation. These effects occur rapidly in treated tissues, as demonstrated by the results of extensive research conducted by Stuart Therapeutics in a variety of anterior and posterior segment ophthalmic disease indications, including glaucoma, retinal diseases, dry eye disease and myopia. For more information, visit www.stuarttherapeutics.com.

     

     





    Stuart Therapeutics

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  • La salud de las mamas durante la menopausia

    La salud de las mamas durante la menopausia


    Newswise — JACKSONVILLE, Florida — Su riesgo de tener cáncer de mama aumenta con la edad, especialmente después de la menopausia. Alrededor de 8 de cada 10 casos de cáncer de mama ocurren en mujeres de más de 50 años. 

    La Dra. Stephanie Faubion, directora de Mayo Clinic Center para Salud Femenina y directora de la Sociedad de Menopausia, comenta que es importante mantener la salud de las mamas, por ejemplo, con mamografías regulares.

    Es común tener cambios en las mamas durante la perimenopausia o la menopausia. 

    “Algunas veces nuestros niveles de estrógeno se disparan y esto puede causar cierta sensibilidad en las mamas. Normalmente nuestra densidad en las mamas suele disminuir un poco con la menopausia porque perdemos estrógenos”, indica la Dra. Faubion.

    Afirma que es normal que ocurran algunos cambios en las mamas relacionados con la edad, y que el cuidado de las mamas es vital.

    “Cuando estamos en la menopausia, es importante recordar que debemos seguir con los exámenes de detección de cáncer de mama con la misma frecuencia que cuando estábamos en el período premenopáusico”, dice la Dra. Faubion.

    Se recomienda empezar con los exámenes de detección de cáncer de mama regulares a los 40 años.

    “Recomendamos una mamografía todos los años. También hay mujeres que tiene mayor densidad en las mamas, a las cuales les recomendamos exámenes de detección complementarios ”, comparte.

    La Dra. Faubion dice que el 50 por ciento de las mujeres estadounidenses tienen mamas densas.

    “Es importante comunicarse con el equipo de atención médica para saber cuáles pueden ser las mejores opciones para hacerse algunos controles adicionales si se encuentra en esta categoría”, advierte la Dra. Faubion.

    Reduzca los riesgos de cáncer de mama, optimice la salud de las mamas

    Algunos factores de riesgo para el cáncer de ovario y de mama, como la edad, los antecedentes de salud reproductiva y la genética (por ejemplo, los antecedentes familiares o los cambios en el gen BRCA) no pueden modificarse, pero si hacemos ciertos cambios en el estilo de vida podemos ayudar a reducir los riesgos.

    Cómo reducir los riesgos de tener cáncer de mama:

    • Mantener un peso saludable.
    • Hacer ejercicio regularmente.
    • Limitar el consumo de alcohol.

    Para obtener más información sobre cómo garantizar una buena salud de las mamas, hable con su equipo de atención médica para buscar otras maneras de reducir sus riesgos y saber cuándo es mejor hacerse los exámenes de detección del cáncer de mama.

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    Información sobre Mayo Clinic


    Mayo Clinic es una organización sin fines de lucro, dedicada a innovar la práctica clínica, la educación y la investigación, así como a ofrecer pericia, compasión y respuestas a todos los que necesitan





    Mayo Clinic

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  • Experts available to discuss potential harm to patients from AI-based software in doctor’s offices

    Experts available to discuss potential harm to patients from AI-based software in doctor’s offices


    In a new commentary published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), University of Maryland School of Medicine faculty warn against the use of AI-driven software tools and other large language models to summarize patient medical data without proper review and oversight from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Without proper regulation, the commentary authors say these new tools could lead to biased decision-making and misdiagnosis. That could lead to severe harm to patients.

    Katherine Goodman, PhD, JD, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at UMSOM, Core Investigator at the University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing (UM-IHC) and lead author of the opinion, along with her colleagues point out that there are currently “no comprehensive standards for large language model-generated clinical summaries beyond the general recognition that summaries should be consistently accurate and concise.” They add that the FDA’s “final guidance for clinical decision support software – published two months before ChatGPT’s release – provides an unintentional ‘roadmap’ for how large language models can avoid FDA medical device regulation”.

    Dr. Goodman and Daniel Morgan, MD, MS, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health and senior author on the commentary, are available for interviews to discuss concerns about how AI software tools could lead to narrative errors and bias in a patient’s electronic health record and recommendations to improve these tools.

    To request an interview, please contact UMSOM media relations.

    Full commentary can be found here

     

    MEDIA CONTACTS:

    Holly Moody-Porter

    Senior Media & Public Relations Specialist

    University of Maryland School of Medicine

     

    Deborah Kotz

    Senior Director of Media Relations

    University of Maryland School of Medicine





    University of Maryland School of Medicine

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  • Scientists Pinpoint Growth of Brain’s Cerebellum as Key to Evolution of Bird Flight

    Scientists Pinpoint Growth of Brain’s Cerebellum as Key to Evolution of Bird Flight


    **EMBARGOED UNTIL 7:01 P.M. ET TUESDAY, JAN 30**

    Evolutionary biologists at Johns Hopkins Medicine report they have combined PET scans of modern pigeons along with studies of dinosaur fossils to help answer an enduring question in biology: How did the brains of birds evolve to enable them to fly?

    The answer, they say, appears to be an adaptive increase in the size of the cerebellum in some fossil vertebrates. The cerebellum is a brain region responsible for movement and motor control.

    The research findings are published in the Jan. 31 issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

    Scientists have long thought that the cerebellum should be important in bird flight, but they lacked direct evidence. To pinpoint its value, the new research combined modern PET scan imaging data of ordinary pigeons with the fossil record, examining brain regions of birds during flight and braincases of ancient dinosaurs.

    “Powered flight among vertebrates is a rare event in evolutionary history,” says Amy Balanoff, Ph.D., assistant professor of functional anatomy and evolution at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and first author on the published research.

    In fact, Balanoff says, just three groups of vertebrates, or animals with a backbone, evolved to fly: extinct pterosaurs, the terrors of the sky during the Mesozoic period, which ended over 65 million years ago, bats and birds.

    The three species are not closely related on the evolutionary tree, and the key factors or factor that enabled flight in all three have remained unclear.

    Besides the outward physical adaptations for flight, such as long upper limbs, certain kinds of feathers, a streamlined body and other features, Balanoff and her colleagues designed research to find features that created a flight-ready brain.

    To do so, she worked with biomedical engineers at Stony Brook University in New York to compare the brain activity of modern pigeons before and after flight.

    The researchers performed positron emission tomography, or PET, imaging scans, the same technology commonly used on humans, to compare activity in 26 regions of the brain when the bird was at rest and immediately after it flew for 10 minutes from one perch to another. They scanned eight birds on different days.

    PET scans use a compound similar to glucose that can be tracked to where it’s most absorbed by brain cells, indicating increased use of energy and thus activity. The tracker degrades and gets excreted from the body within a day or two.

    Of the 26 regions, one area — the cerebellum — had statistically significant increases in activity levels between resting and flying in all eight birds. Overall, the level of activity increase in the cerebellum differed by more than two standard statistical deviations, compared with other areas of the brain.

    The researchers also detected increased brain activity in the so-called optic flow pathways, a network of brain cells that connect the retina in the eye to the cerebellum. These pathways process movement across the visual field.

    Balanoff says their findings of activity increase in the cerebellum and optic flow pathways weren’t necessarily surprising, since the areas have been hypothesized to play a role in flight.

    What was new in their research was linking the cerebellum findings of flight-enabled brains in modern birds to the fossil record that showed how the brains of birdlike dinosaurs began to develop brain conditions for powered flight.

    To do so, Balanoff used a digitized database of endocasts, or molds of the internal space of dinosaur skulls, which when filled, resemble the brain.

    Balanoff identified and traced a sizable increase in cerebellum volume to some of the earliest species of maniraptoran dinosaurs, which preceded the first appearances of powered flight among ancient bird relatives, including Archaeopteryx, a winged dinosaur.

    Balanoff and her team also found evidence in the endocasts of an increase in tissue folding in the cerebellum of early maniraptorans, an indication of increasing brain complexity.

    The researchers cautioned that these are early findings, and brain activity changes during powered flight could also occur during other behaviors, such as gliding. They also note that their tests involved straightforward flying, without obstacles and with an easy flightpath, and other brain regions may be more active during complex flight maneuvers.

    The research team plans next to pinpoint precise areas in the cerebellum that enable a flight-ready brain and the neural connections between these structures.

    Scientific theories for why the brain gets bigger throughout evolutionary history include the need to traverse new and different landscapes, setting the stage for flight and other locomotive styles, says Gabriel Bever, Ph.D., associate professor of functional anatomy and evolution at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

    “At Johns Hopkins, the biomedical community has a wide-ranging set of tools and technology to help us understand evolutionary history and link our findings to fundamental research on how the brain works,” he adds.

    In addition to Balanoff and Bever, other authors of the study are Elizabeth Ferrer of the American Museum of Natural History and Samuel Merritt University; Lemise Saleh and Paul Vaska of Stony Brook University; Paul Gignac of the American Museum of Natural History and University of Arizona, M. Eugenia Gold of the American Museum of Natural History and Suffolk University; Jesús Marugán-Lobón  of the Autonomous University of Madrid; Mark Norell of the American Museum of Natural History; David Ouellette of Weill Cornell Medical College; Michael Salerno of the University of Pennsylvania; Akinobu Watanabe of the American Museum of Natural History, New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Natural History Museum of London; and Shouyi Wei of the New York Proton Center.

    Funding for the research was provided by the National Science Foundation.





    Johns Hopkins Medicine

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  • Bernadette Boden-Albala to be honored for contributions in addressing stroke inequities

    Bernadette Boden-Albala to be honored for contributions in addressing stroke inequities


    Newswise — Irvine, Calif., Jan. 30, 2024 — Bernadette Boden-Albala, M.P.H., Dr.P.H., director of the University of California, Irvine Program in Public Health and founding dean of the planned School of Population and Public Health, has been selected to receive the prestigious Edgar J. Kenton III Lecture Award from the American Stroke Association, a division of the American Heart Association, just prior to its annual International Stroke Conference. She is being recognized for her lifetime achievement of contributions to investigation, management, mentorship and community service in the field of stroke inequities or related disciplines.

    “It’s a great honor to be acknowledged by the American Heart Association’s leadership at such an important event,” Boden-Albala said. “Stroke exhibits significant racial and ethnic inequalities, encompassing differences in incidence, prevalence, treatment and outcomes. This award and lecture provide me with a valuable platform to highlight the crucial role of community-based research, particularly in addressing stroke disparities among diverse communities.”

    An internationally renowned expert in the social epidemiology of stroke and cardiovascular disease, Boden-Albala has authored or co-authored 170 publications that have become a blueprint for community-based stroke and heart disease prevention. Her robust research portfolio spans more than 25 years, with a focus on the roles of sex, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, social support, social networks and stress. Her work has significantly contributed to the understanding of inequalities and patterns of disparity across the U.S. and globally.

    The American Heart Association will host its 2024 International Stroke Conference on Feb. 7 to 9 at the Phoenix Convention Center. Boden-Albala will present her lecture Feb. 6 at a pre-conference symposium called Health Equity and Actionable Disparities in Stroke: Understanding and Problem Solving. Held at the same site, HEADS-UP is recognized internationally as the premier meeting dedicated to the science and treatment of cerebrovascular disease and brain health. This annual gathering brings together a vast network of professionals to gain insights into the physiological processes associated with stroke, explore more effective therapies for brain health and stroke recovery, and collectively strive to reduce the burden of stroke worldwide.

    About the University of California, Irvine: Founded in 1965, UCI is a member of the prestigious Association of American Universities and is ranked among the nation’s top 10 public universities by U.S. News & World Report. The campus has produced five Nobel laureates and is known for its academic achievement, premier research, innovation and anteater mascot. Led by Chancellor Howard Gillman, UCI has more than 36,000 students and offers 224 degree programs. It’s located in one of the world’s safest and most economically vibrant communities and is Orange County’s second-largest employer, contributing $7 billion annually to the local economy and $8 billion statewide. For more on UCI, visit www.uci.edu.

    Media access: Radio programs/stations may, for a fee, use an on-campus ISDN line to interview UCI faculty and experts, subject to availability and university approval. For more UCI news, visit news.uci.edu. Additional resources for journalists may be found at https://news.uci.edu/media-resources.

    NOTE TO EDITORS: PHOTO AVAILABLE AT
    https://news.uci.edu/2024/01/30/bernadette-boden-albala-to-be-honored-for-contributions-in-addressing-stroke-inequities/





    University of California, Irvine

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  • Fighting Viruses that Cause Cancer

    Fighting Viruses that Cause Cancer


    Newswise — Contrary to how it may seem, most viruses do not want to kill their hosts. “They want to hang out as long as possible, make more viruses, and infect as many other hosts as they can,” says Karl Munger, the Dorothy Todd Bishop Research Professor and chair of developmental, molecular and chemical biology at Tufts University School of Medicine. Unfortunately, that nasty proclivity of viruses to multiply and infect has some unintended consequences.

    In the battle between host and invader, cells produce responses to stop viruses from growing, and viruses try and commandeer the cells’ defense mechanisms and get them to replicate regardless. “There’s a fight between host and virus; because it needs to multiply, it tries to convince a non-dividing cell to divide,” Munger says, “which is one of the hallmarks of cancer.”

    Munger has been studying the connections between viruses and cancer for more than 30 years, starting with his Ph.D. at the University of Zurich, and including stints at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Harvard University, before coming to Tufts in 2014. By conservative estimates, viruses are responsible for 15 percent of cancers. “It’s probably double that if you look at cancers in which viral infections have contributed,” says Munger, who focuses his work on human papillomavirus (HPV), the most common sexually transmitted infection. He joined Tufts with the intent of creating a nucleus for basic research into viruses and cancer, a relatively under-recognized and underfunded area of cancer research.

    “Studying how viruses contribute to cancer is an opportunity to distinguish Tufts as a center of excellence in cancer research,” says Munger, who is also interim vice dean for research at the School of Medicine.

    That focus plays to the Tufts’ strengths. Brian Schaffhausen, professor emeritus of developmental, molecular and chemical biology, has made seminal discoveries about the growth and suppression of tumors by focusing on murine polyomavirus. John Coffin, American Cancer Society Research Professor and Distinguished Professor in Molecular Biology and Microbiology, has long studied the connections between cancer and retroviruses such as HIV. Katya Heldwein, American Cancer Society, Massachusetts Division, Professor of Molecular Biology, examines how herpesviruses get in and out of cells—and how they might be stopped. Recently, Tufts hired two new researchers: Rui Guo, assistant professor of molecular biology and microbiology, who focuses on Epstein-Barr virus (EPV) and joined the university last July; and Aaron Mendez, assistant professor of molecular biology and microbiology, who is a specialist on Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) and joined Tufts in January.

    Munger, who is also affiliated with the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, learned the power of collaboration early in his career. As a postdoctoral researcher at the NIH, he focused on two proteins, known as E6 and E7, that are expressed in cervical cancer associated with HPV. At that time, researchers didn’t know whether they were drivers of cancer or mere innocent bystanders. In helping to solve that question, Munger was inspired by an annual meeting of researchers working on a specific tumor suppressor protein held in a farmhouse in Western Massachusetts, organized by leaders in the field, including the late David Livingston, M65, who was physician-in-chief at Dana-Farber Cancer Research Institute.

    “I learned that even though competition drives scientific progress, research should not be a blood sport, and in general it is more productive to solve problems with help from your friends,” Munger wrote in Viruses and Cancer: An Accidental Journey, an account of his research published in PLOS Pathogens in 2016.

    Munger and his colleagues determined those tiny viral proteins did in fact cause cancer by subverting the cells’ usual signaling pathways to create uncontrolled division. “There are around 400 different kinds of HPV, and only a very small number of them are cancer-causing,” Munger says. His lab is now looking at ways to target these viral proteins.

    Targeting HIV

    A class of viruses known as retroviruses, including HIV, infects the body by implanting themselves directly into the chromosomes inside the cell nucleus, joining their DNA to that of the host’s. Years ago, people thought HIV couldn’t cause cancer, explains John Coffin, since HIV usually kills the cells that it infects.

    Coffin’s lab has long been studying how retroviruses cause cancer, first in animals, and more recently with HIV in human cells. When genetic material gets integrated into the wrong gene, it can cause rampant cell division leading to cancer. “Researchers have identified hundreds of genes like this, where a gene involved in cellular growth is supposed to be turned on and off, but instead it’s turned on all the time,” says Coffin, who has spent decades studying HIV and other retroviruses. “Then the cell goes out of control and divides all the time, which is basically what cancer is.”

    That’s important, he says, since this process often starts before an individual knows they are infected. HIV patients are also particularly susceptible to side effects of cancer treatments like chemotherapy and radiation, which can stress already weakened immune systems.

    Coffin has shown that HIV can cause cancerous changes when integrating into a specific area of the cell’s DNA called the STAT3 gene. Identifying the specific cell and viral genes that can cause cancer can help scientists find a targeted treatment to prevent it. “If you can find a small molecule that turns off the expression of the virus, you can kill the cancer even long after it has started.”

    These therapies are becoming even more important for HIV patients, who can now live much longer than they used to due to new antiretroviral treatments that can extend life. “Prior to the 1990s, patients were dying at a much younger age, and didn’t have a chance to develop these problems,” says Jose Caro, an attending physician at Tufts Medical Center and the Dr. Jane Murphy Gaughan Professor and assistant professor of medicine at the School of Medicine. In the late 1990s, physicians noticed many more HIV patients developing anal cancer, which is associated with HPV. While female patients are often screened for cervical cancer, he says, precursors to anal cancer were often left undetected until it was much farther along.

    “Because HIV has an effect on the immune system, it is more likely that somebody would acquire another virus—or if they previously acquired the virus, that it would progress and replicate,” says Caro. While 80% of sexually active people acquire HPV, it may persist in tissues of HIV patients longer than it does in others, he says—and the longer it persists, the higher likelihood of causing cancer.

    Anal cancer, he adds, is a very difficult cancer to treat, especially in HIV patients with weakened immune systems. “Chemo and radiation come with their set of difficulties and side effects, at the same time, there are also the emotional and psychological side effects of having a genital cancer that can affect someone’s sex life,” Caro says. Lately, there has been hope for the condition, with a landmark study last year that identified a precursor to anal cancer that can help doctors catch it early.

    Battling Herpes

    Another class of viruses that can cause cancer are herpesviruses—however, not the oral or genital herpes that usually come to mind. “There are nine different types of herpesviruses that infect humans, and only two cause cancer,” says Katya Heldwein. Those are EBV, better known for causing infectious mononucleosis or “mono,” and KSHV, which can cause a rare cancer affecting bone and soft tissue. Heldwein’s research focuses on how these viruses get inside and out of these cells.

    “If they can’t get inside the cell, then the cell doesn’t get infected,” she says. Just as importantly, once viral material is inside the nucleus, “they still have to assemble all of the viral components, so the complete viral particle comes out to infect more cells. If you understand how this happens, you can identify weak points and target them.”

    Heldwein says viruses—including HIV and influenza—fuse with the cell membrane by using a single protein to unlock the membrane and spill its contents inside. Herpesviruses, however, distribute that unlocking function across three or four different proteins, Heldwein says.

    “Instead of one person using a key, it’s like one person picks up the key, another sticks it in the lock, another turns it, and another pushes open the door.” It’s a mystery why these viruses have evolved such a complicated method, she says, but it makes it much more difficult to target them with a vaccine. “You could raise antibodies against one protein, but in isolation, it might not look to the immune system the same way it does to its friends,” she says. She and other biologists are just beginning to understand how all these parts work together.

    While Heldwein doesn’t focus specifically on the connection between herpesviruses and cancers, she is thrilled about the recruitment of Guo and Mendez to the School of Medicine, who work on cancer and EBV and KSHV, respectively.

    Guo’s research focuses on how EBV transforms normal human cells into cancerous ones, particularly in immunocompromised individuals. “Some 95 percent of people have this virus, but in most people, their immune system can suppress it, pushing it into the direction of latency,” he says. In addition to mononucleosis, EBV can also cause certain types of cancer, such as Burkitt’s lymphoma, which hides within white blood cells and can cause abnormalities within those cells that lead to cancer development.

    As a postdoctoral researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Guo was interested in discovering how EBV manages such metabolic processes, performing genetic screens to see whether those genetic chances can be stopped. He and colleagues focused on how the virus uses certain nutrients, including a particular amino acid called methionine. In a paper published last year, they showed that in mice infected with Burkitt’s lymphoma, a diet low in methionine changed the makeup of tumor cells, causing EBV to become visible to the immune system—and therefore potentially subject to attack.

    “Just by changing the diet, we could see the EBV gene got repressed in those mice, and the tumor stopped growing within two weeks,” Guo says. While treatment in humans is still a way off, the findings provide hope that a similar strategy could be followed as an alternative to more invasive chemo and radiation therapies, perhaps combined with T-cells that can target tumor cells in the blood.

    While all these researchers are pursuing different viruses, exploring different pathways towards intervention, there are enough commonalities in their approach to make collaboration fruitful, says Munger. Each is examining the mechanism in which these viruses manipulate the body’s genetic processes and cause cells to become cancerous—and each is searching for a way to stop that malfunction with treatments that could potentially be a less invasive alternative to current cancer treatments.

    While such research can be slow, and frustrating at times, the payoff could be huge, says Munger, who is often reminded of something his mentor Livingston, who passed away in 2021, used to say: “Even if you have bad days where your grants get rejected and your research doesn’t work, a cancer patient never has a good day.” That idea has always stuck with Munger and continues to motivate him to create a powerful center of excellence devoted to viruses and cancer. “There are a lot of commonalities between what these viruses do and the pathways they target,” he says. “This is definitely something we can examine together.”





    Tufts University

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  • Hybrid energy harvesters that harness heat and vibration simultaneously

    Hybrid energy harvesters that harness heat and vibration simultaneously


    Newswise — Harvesting energy sources such as heat, vibration, light, and electromagnetic waves from everyday environments such as industrial sites and automobiles and converting them into electrical energy is known as energy harvesting. Energy harvesting makes it easier to power today’s popular IoT sensors and wireless devices that are located in environments where battery replacement is difficult.

    Dr. Hyun-Cheol Song and Dr. Sunghoon Hur of Electronic Materials Research Center at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) have developed a hybrid energy harvesting system that increases power production by more than 50% by combining thermoelectric and piezoelectric effects.

    The thermoelectric effect, which converts thermal energy from both ends of the device into electrical energy, has a low energy conversion efficiency, and the piezoelectric effect, which converts mechanical vibration into electrical energy, has a high impedance, so energy cannot be reliably harvested. To overcome the limitations of single-mode energy harvesters, hybrid energy harvesters have been proposed in the past, but they are mainly based on simply combining the energy generated by each mechanism.

    In response, the KIST research team developed a thermoelectric-piezoelectric hybrid energy harvester that complements the shortcomings of thermoelectric and piezoelectric devices to create a synergistic effect in environments with heat sources and vibrations. First, instead of a heat sink, which is a static shape with a large cross-sectional area that is bulky and in contact with air, a cantilever was fabricated to improve the heat dissipation effect in a vibration environment, resulting in a thermoelectric device output that was improved by more than 25%. The researchers also proposed a hybrid energy harvesting structure in which a polymer-type piezoelectric device (MFC) was attached to the cantilever to generate additional power by generating tensile and compressive deformation of the piezoelectric device as the cantilever shakes. The research team successfully applied this hybrid energy harvester to stably drive a commercial IoT sensor (GPS positioning sensor, 3 V, 20 mW), demonstrating the potential for future IoT sensors to run continuously without battery power supply.

    “This study confirms that the hybrid energy harvesting system can be reliably applied to our real life,” said Dr. Sunghoon Hur of KIST, who led the research. “We have confirmed its effectiveness in places where heat and vibration exist together, such as automobile engines, and are currently planning to build a system that can be applied to factory facilities or construction machinery engines that are difficult to supply power and diagnose their condition wirelessly.”

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    KIST was established in 1966 as the first government-funded research institute in Korea. KIST now strives to solve national and social challenges and secure growth engines through leading and innovative research. For more information, please visit KIST’s website at https://eng.kist.re.kr/

    The research was supported by the Ministry of Science and ICT (Minister Jong-ho Lee) as Institutional Program of KIST and was published in the latest issue of Energy Conversion and Management (IF: 10.4, top 1.8% in JCR), an international journal in the energy field.





    National Research Council of Science and Technology

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  • New Research Finds Volume Alone Does Not Predict Quality Outcomes in Pediatric Cardiac Surgery

    New Research Finds Volume Alone Does Not Predict Quality Outcomes in Pediatric Cardiac Surgery


    Newswise — SAN ANTONIO (January 28, 2024) — A study of pediatric heart surgery centers across the United States has demonstrated that, when it comes to successful surgery, it’s not just the size of the program that matters in determining quality outcomes. 

    Historically, hospitals with a “low volume” of pediatric heart operations—in this case, those that perform 103 surgeries or fewer a year—have been associated with worse outcomes for patients. However, a team led by D. Chauhan, MD, from WVU Medicine Children’s Heart Center found that “overperformers” and “underperformers” exist in all volume categories. 

    “Contrary to conventional wisdom regarding the relationship between institutional volume and quality outcomes, there are high-performing low-volume centers in pediatric cardiac surgery, for even the most complex operations,” said senior author Christopher Mascio, MD, a pediatric cardiothoracic surgeon, professor, and executive director at WVU Medicine Children’s Heart Center. “There are also underperforming high-volume programs. Judging program quality is more complex than a single volume number.”

    The team examined a total of 25,749 heart operations performed by 235 pediatric hospitals across the country. They divided the centers into three volume categories: low-volume (103 or fewer cases per year), mid-volume (104 to 194 cases per year), and high-volume (more than 194 cases per year). They included only “on-pump” procedures—meaning, those that used a cardiopulmonary bypass machine, which takes over temporarily for the heart and lungs while the operation is performed. 

     

    According to coauthor J. Hunter Mehaffey, MD, an assistant professor and director of cardiac surgery research at WVU, the study included variables commonly used and validated in evaluating risk in pediatric cardiac surgery including age, race, birth weight, genetic diagnosis, history of re-operation, the urgency of the procedure, the patient’s length of hospital stay before the surgery, and the presence of heterotaxy (an abnormal arrangement of the internal organs).

    Looking at hospital mortality rates, the researchers found that all three volume groups had both “overperforming” and “underperforming” hospitals. For six “benchmark” operations as defined by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, they found no statistically significant difference in hospital mortality when comparing low- and mid-volume centers to high-volume centers.  

    The benchmark operations included tetralogy of Fallot repair, arterial switch with ventricular septal defect (VSD), arterial switch without VSD, Glenn and Fontan procedures, and truncus arteriosus repair.

    This new research study will be presented at The Society of Thoracic Surgeons’ 2024 Annual Meeting in San Antonio, Texas. The Society selected the presentation as its 2024 James S. Tweddell Memorial Paper in Congenital Surgery.

    Underscoring the study’s importance, Dr. Mascio added, “When parents consider which center is best for their child, there are many other factors at play, including care team coordination, proximity, surgical team, and personal interactions. The time is ripe for the congenital community to develop better methods for evaluating program quality. We hope this contribution provides a nidus for continued discussion around this issue, providing a voice to programs of all sizes.” 

     

    # # #

    Founded in 1964, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons is a not-for-profit organization representing more than 7,700 cardiothoracic surgeons, researchers, and allied healthcare professionals worldwide who are dedicated to ensuring the best possible outcomes for surgeries of the heart, lung, and esophagus, as well as other surgical procedures within the chest. The Society’s mission is to enhance the ability of cardiothoracic surgeons to provide the highest quality patient care through education, research, and advocacy.

     





    The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

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  • New Research Highlights Superior Long-Term Survival with Multi-Arterial Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Over Single Arterial Grafting

    New Research Highlights Superior Long-Term Survival with Multi-Arterial Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Over Single Arterial Grafting


    Newswise — SAN ANTONIO (January 27, 2024) ─ A new study presented at The Society of Thoracic Surgeons’ 2024 Annual Meeting in San Antonio, Texas, examines the ongoing controversy surrounding the choice between multi-arterial grafting (MAG) and single arterial grafting (SAG) in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) for multivessel coronary revascularization.

    The research, spanning from 2008 to 2019 and involving over one million patients undergoing isolated CABG with more than two bypass grafts, found that multi-arterial grafting CABG is associated with superior long-term survival compared to single arterial grafting, establishing it as the preferred surgical strategy for multivessel revascularization. 

    “Multiple small studies have demonstrated a survival benefit of multi-arterial grafting. We wanted to know if this survival benefit of multi-arterial grafting observed in single-center studies would translate to a large national cohort,” said the study’s lead author, Joseph Sabik III, MD, University Hospitals.  “Using the STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database, we were able to demonstrate that it does.”

     At 10 years, MAG demonstrated improved unadjusted (HR 0.59, 95% CI 0.58-0.61) and adjusted (HR 0.86, 95% CI 0.85-0.88) survival rates compared to SAG. A center volume of 10 or more MAG cases per year was associated with survival benefits. 

    MAG’s survival advantage over SAG was found in various subgroups, including stable coronary disease, acute coronary syndrome, and acute infarction. Notably, MAG showed superior survival for patients with a BMI less than 40, whereas patients with a BMI of 40 or higher had superior survival with SAG. Survival outcomes were equivalent between MAG and SAG for patients aged 80 years or older, and those with severe heart failure, renal failure, peripheral vascular disease, or obesity.

    Patient data was collected from the STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database and linked to the National Death Index for comprehensive longitudinal survival analysis. Risk-adjustment measures, including inverse probability weighting and multivariable modeling, were implemented to ensure accurate comparisons.

    These findings have significant implications for clinicians and cardiac surgeons when deciding on the most appropriate multivessel revascularization approach.

    “The survival benefit of multi-arterial grafting was observed in nearly all patients, except in those 80 or older and in those with co-morbidities graded as severe, where multi and single-arterial grafting resulted in similar survival. The only patients where single arterial grafting resulted in better survival were severely obese,” said Dr. Sabik. 

     

    This research not only contributes valuable insights to the ongoing debate but also provides evidence-based guidance for healthcare professionals in optimizing patient outcomes during CABG procedures.

    ###

    Founded in 1964, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons is a not-for-profit organization representing more than 7,700 cardiothoracic surgeons, researchers, and allied healthcare professionals worldwide who are dedicated to ensuring the best possible outcomes for surgeries of the heart, lung, and esophagus, as well as other surgical procedures within the chest. The Society’s mission is to enhance the ability of cardiothoracic surgeons to provide the highest quality patient care through education, research, and advocacy.





    The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

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  • Subcutaneous Nivolumab as Effective as IV for Renal Cell Carcinoma — With Much Faster Treatment Time

    Subcutaneous Nivolumab as Effective as IV for Renal Cell Carcinoma — With Much Faster Treatment Time


    • Subcutaneous formula slashes treatment time to under 5 minutes
    • Broad impact seen for greater access to and experience with treatment
    • Study has implications for treatment of many cancer types

    Newswise — SAN FRANCISCO — Subcutaneous injection of the immunotherapy nivolumab (brand name Opdivo) is noninferior to intravenous delivery and dramatically reduces treatment time in patients with renal cell carcinoma, as seen in the results of a large phase 3 clinical trial reported today at the 2024 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Genitourinary Cancers Symposium in San Francisco, California. Saby George, MD, FACP, Professor of Oncology and Medicine and Director of Network Clinical Trials at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, will deliver an oral abstract summarizing the findings of “A Study of Subcutaneous Nivolumab Versus Intravenous Nivolumab in Participants with Previously Treated Clear Cell Renal Carcinoma That Is Advanced or Has Spread (CheckMate-67T)” (NCT04810078).

     “The burden of treatment felt by cancer patients is tremendous. If nivolumab can be given as a subcutaneous injection instead of an intravenous infusion, their treatment experience will be significantly improved,” says Dr. George, who is the presenting author, a member of the clinical trial steering committee and site principal investigator at Roswell Park. “Instead of one hour in an infusion chair, they will get the injection done in five minutes.”

    He points to the high demand for infusion chair appointments at most cancer centers, which can result in treatment delays of a week or more.

    “If nivolumab becomes available subcutaneously, we can administer it in the clinic instead of sending patients to infusion centers,” he says. That outcome could simultaneously speed treatment time for patients receiving nivolumab and shorten wait times for patients who still need to receive treatment in an infusion center.

    The availability of injectable nivolumab could also reduce health disparities. “One of the major problems is access to treatment,” says Dr. George, noting that some patients live a long distance from an infusion center and do not have a way to get there. “Patients who don’t live near an infusion center could get treatment closer to home, at a clinic, and that could improve access and help reduce disparities.”

    Sponsored by Bristol Myers Squibb, the drug’s manufacturer, the clinical trial began in May 2021, randomizing 495 patients at 73 centers in 17 countries. Roswell Park was one of only three participating sites in the U.S. and the only one in New York State.

    Patients in the study had advanced or metastatic renal cell carcinoma, had received no more than two prior treatments with systemic therapies and no prior immunotherapy. They were randomized 1:1 to receive nivolumab either subcutaneously or intravenously. Nivolumab is FDA-approved and the standard-of-care treatment for those patients.

    The study’s primary objective was to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of subcutaneous vs. intravenous delivery — how the body interacted with the nivolumab, including whether blood levels of the drug were comparable in the two groups over time. Those measures included the daily average concentration of the drug in the blood over 28 days (Cavgd28) and the concentration of the drug at the end of the dosing cycle (Cminss). Both measures were noninferior to intravenous nivolumab, as evidenced in pharmacokinetic measures and overall response rate.

    The objective response rate for the subcutaneous group — the percentage of patients who achieved a complete or partial response, measured by blinded independent central review — proved noninferior to the intravenous group, at 24.2% vs. 18.2%, respectively. Median progression-free survival stood at 7.23 months for the subcutaneous group vs. 5.65 months for the IV group. The safety profile was similar for both groups.

    More than 80,000 new cases of renal cell carcinoma are diagnosed in the U.S. each year.

    Because nivolumab is already FDA-approved for more than 20 indications across multiple malignancies, CheckMate-67T will likely serve as a gateway to additional studies evaluating the effectiveness of the subcutaneous formula in other patient populations.

    “This is a groundbreaking achievement for patients and physicians, and will definitely make treatment easier for patients,” says Dr. George.

    ASCO GU Presentation Details

    Abstract LBA360: “Subcutaneous nivolumab (NIVO SC) vs. intravenous nivolumab (NIVO IV) in patients with previously treated advanced or metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC): Pharmacokinetics (PK), efficacy, and safety results from CheckMate 67T.”

    Time/date: Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, 8:47 a.m. PST, Moscone West, Level 3, Ballroom

    ###

    From the world’s first chemotherapy research to the PSA prostate cancer biomarker, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center generates innovations that shape how cancer is detected, treated and prevented worldwide. Driven to eliminate cancer’s grip on humanity, the Roswell Park team of 4,000 makes compassionate, patient-centered cancer care and services accessible across New York State and beyond. Founded in 1898, Roswell Park was among the first three cancer centers nationwide to become a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center and is the only one to hold this designation in Upstate New York. To learn more about Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Roswell Park Care Network, visit www.roswellpark.org, call 1-800-ROSWELL (1-800-767-9355) or email [email protected].





    Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

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  • STS Announces Late-Breaker Research to Be Presented 
at the 2024 Annual Meeting

    STS Announces Late-Breaker Research to Be Presented at the 2024 Annual Meeting

    Newswise — SAN ANTONIO (January 27, 2024) — The Society of Thoracic Surgeons has released late-breaking research scheduled for presentation at the 2024 Annual Meeting taking place January 27 – 29 in San Antonio. The conference, healthcare’s leading scientific and educational convening specializing in cardiothoracic surgery, has a rich history of showcasing clinical trials with a strong foundation of detailed methodology and trusted data collection governed by ethical clinical principles.

    The event’s late-breaking trial sessions focus on studies anticipated to significantly influence advances in cardiothoracic patient care. In this fast-paced healthcare landscape, surgeons look for the latest evidence to identify new therapies or preventive measures and help inform the most effective treatment decisions.  

    Key late-breaking studies selected for presentation include:

    Longitudinal Follow-up of Elderly Patients After Esophageal Cancer Resection in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons General Thoracic Surgery Database

    The study defines characteristics associated with long-term survival following esophagectomy for cancer in the Medicare population, using the STS General Thoracic Surgery Database linked to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services data. The analysis included 4,798 patients from 207 STS sites who underwent esophagectomy between 2012-2019. The researchers found that Medicare patients undergoing esophagectomy for cancer exhibit identifiable predictors for long-term survival and readmission. The absence of pathologic T and N downstaging increases the risk for long-term mortality and readmission.

    These findings suggest opportunities to enhance clinical practice and improve outcomes for Medicare patients undergoing esophagectomy for cancer.

    Cardiac Surgery after Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: Trends and Outcomes

    The researchers set out to document trends and outcomes in cardiac surgery following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), a topic gaining importance as reports of subsequent cardiac operations and early TAVR explantations increase. Using the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Adult Cardiac Surgery Database, the study covers adult patients who underwent cardiac surgery after an initial TAVR from January 2012 to March 2023.

    The findings underscore the escalating need for both aortic and non-aortic valve cardiac surgeries following TAVR. They note a substantial increase in the frequency of these surgeries, emphasizing the importance of understanding outcomes. The observed elevated risk in these cases, as indicated by mortality and stroke rates, calls for careful consideration, particularly given the expanding use of TAVR across a broader range of age and risk profiles. The study suggests the need for ongoing assessment and longitudinal evidence to inform decision-making in the evolving landscape of TAVR applications.

    The STS 2023 Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Surgical Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation: Key Takeaways and How Do They Differ from the ACC/AHA Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Practice Guidelines?

    The Society of Thoracic Surgeons’ 2023 clinical practice guidelines for the surgical management of atrial fibrillation (AF) incorporates the latest evidence for surgical ablation (SA) and left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO) across various clinical scenarios. It emphasizes the evolving role of surgical ablation and left atrial appendage occlusion in managing atrial fibrillation.

    Compared to the 2017 clinical practice guidelines, this latest version emphasizes SA in first-time, non-emergent cardiac surgery and its long-term benefits, an extension of the recommendation to perform SA in all patients with AF undergoing first-time, non-emergent cardiac surgery. Further guidance is provided for patients with structural heart disease and AF who are considered for transcatheter valve repair or replacement.

    The recommendations highlight the importance of a multidisciplinary team, comprehensive assessment, and long-term follow-up, with specific attention to diverse clinical scenarios. The Class I recommendation for LAAO and expanded use of SA signify the growing confidence in these interventions based on recent evidence.

    Impact of Surgical Factors on Event-Free Survival in the Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Phase 3 Trial of Perioperative Pembrolizumab For Early-Stage Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

    New findings from the KEYNOTE-671 research study, focused on resectable early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), have unveiled a significant breakthrough in the treatment landscape.

    The study, titled “Impact of Surgical-Related Data on Event-Free Survival in KEYNOTE-671,” demonstrated that neoadjuvant therapy with pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy did not delay surgery. Neoadjuvant pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy with adjuvant pembrolizumab provided meaningful improvement in EFS compared with neoadjuvant chemotherapy alone for resectable early-stage NSCLC regardless of clinical nodal status, baseline disease stage, or type of surgery.

    Note to editors: Abstracts are available upon request.

    # # #

    Founded in 1964, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons is a not-for-profit organization representing more than 7,700 cardiothoracic surgeons, researchers, and allied healthcare professionals worldwide who are dedicated to ensuring the best possible outcomes for surgeries of the heart, lung, and esophagus, as well as other surgical procedures within the chest. The Society’s mission is to enhance the ability of cardiothoracic surgeons to provide the highest quality patient care through education, research, and advocacy.

    The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

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  • ​Vaccines May Protect Against Alzheimer’s, But How? Asks Domenico Praticò, MD, FCPP

    ​Vaccines May Protect Against Alzheimer’s, But How? Asks Domenico Praticò, MD, FCPP

    Commonly used vaccines may also protect against dementia, according to a recent paper published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease [J. Alzheimer’s Disease 2023; 95(2): 703–718)].

    The authors found that after receiving the tetanus/diphtheria vaccine and whooping cough (aka, pertussis) vaccine there was a 30% reduction in the risk of developing AD. Similar results were observed in individuals who received the pneumococcal vaccine. In the case of the vaccine for herpes the risk was reduced by 25%.

    “The question not answered by the study is: what is the mechanism whereby the vaccine would protect against dementia?,” asks Domenico Praticò, M.D., FCPP, and Director of the Alzheimer’s Center at Temple. Praticò was not directly involved in the study.

    “For years, there was empirical observation suggesting that activation of our immune system could keep Alzheimer’s disease at bay. Interestingly, some previous small studies on the effect of general vaccinations on dementia risk provided somewhat promising results,” Praticò says.

    In the current study, the authors looked at a large number of subjects (>200,000) who received some or all of the common vaccines recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) for older adults: tetanus, diphtheria (with and without pertussis), herpes, and pneumococcus. This group was compared with a group of individuals who did not receive any vaccines.

    “A possible answer to this important biological question is that the vaccines, by “instructing” the immune system to respond to a particular target could indirectly “prepare” the immune cells to respond more efficiently to any hypothetical insult to the brain,” suggests Praticò. “In other words, they may be better prepared for modulation of the inflammatory response (aka neuroinflammation) within the central nervous system, and regulate inflammation only for the beneficial aspects it provides.”

    “The current study would support some recent epidemiological observations that exposure to infectious agents (e.g., herpes) is garnering attention as a possible additional risk factor,” adds Praticò, “in addition to the already known risk factors for AD, such as genetics, diet, and age.“ 

    “In summary, this new study is compelling,” Praticò concludes, “however; it needs to be replicated to strengthen the findings and the potential translational value. Moreover, the hypothesis regarding the possible mechanism needs to be tested both in animal models as well as in vitro (cells) models.”

    For more information on this topic, please visit:

    www.Praticò-lab.com

    https://medium.com/@domenicoPraticò

    Alzheimer’s Center at Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine

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  • California State University to Honor CSUF’s Guardian Scholars Program on 25th Anniversary of Inspired Program to Assist Former Foster Youth

    California State University to Honor CSUF’s Guardian Scholars Program on 25th Anniversary of Inspired Program to Assist Former Foster Youth


    Newswise — Cal State Fullerton’s Guardian Scholars Program, the first of its kind in the nation, will be recognized on Jan. 30 by the California State University Board of Trustees for 25 years of supporting former foster youth on their path to educational and career success.  

    The Guardian Scholars Program removes barriers for former foster youth by providing scholarships and a nurturing support system with services that promote belonging and success for students. Since its founding at CSUF in 1998, the Guardian Scholars Program has been replicated at the CSU’s 22 other campuses and 90 colleges and universities nationwide. 

    Cal State Fullerton’s transfer scholars have a nearly 80% graduation rate, essentially eliminating the gap between them and the general student population at Cal State Fullerton. Many of CSUF’s Guardian Scholars graduates have gone on to earn master’s degrees and pursue careers in social work, counseling, education and international business. In contrast, 3% to 4% of the nation’s former foster youth obtain a four-year college degree, according to the National Foster Youth Initiative.

    “A university’s greatest resource is its people. Put the right people in the right place, and you can change lives forever,” says Becky Wells ‘00, of Lakeway, Texas, the first graduate of the CSUF Guardian Scholars Program. 

    We invite you to view the presentation virtually or in person and learn more about this inspiring and transformational program. We also can assist in scheduling interviews with Wells, current CSUF graduate student Junely Merwin ’19 (B.S. human services), and Felipe Martinez, the director of CSUF’s Center for Scholars.

    Here are the presentation details: 

    What: Recognition for the 25th anniversary of Cal State Fullerton’s Guardian Scholars Program — the first of its kind in the nation to help former foster youth succeed in higher education.

    When: Jan. 30, during a 3 p.m. California State University Board of Trustees committee meeting (the presentation is estimated on the agenda at about 3:30 p.m.)

    Where: California State University Board of Trustees meeting, 

    CSU Office of the Chancellor 
    401 Golden Shore Long Beach, CA 90802
    Link to the live broadcast of the meeting
    Agenda

    Data and details: 

    • More than 250 students have graduated from Cal State Fullerton’s Guardian Scholars Program since it began with three students in 1998 and sparked programs supporting former foster youth at universities and colleges throughout the country, including all 23 CSU campuses.

    • This year, a cohort of 27 — CSUF’s largest group — will graduate in May.

    • The CSUF program also recently expanded its services to graduate students and nine are participating.

    • Students in foster care who enroll in universities deal with such barriers as living expenses, housing, access to technology and lack of guidance navigating the complexities of academia.


    About Cal State Fullerton:
     The largest university in the CSU and the only campus in Orange County, Cal State Fullerton offers more than 100 degree programs and Division 1 athletics. Recognized as a national model for supporting student success, CSUF excels with innovative, high-impact educational practices, including faculty-student collaborative research, study abroad and competitive internships. CSUF is a top public university known for its success in supporting first-generation and underrepresented students, and preparing all students to become leaders in the global marketplace. Our vibrant and diverse campus is a primary driver of workforce and economic development in the region. Visit fullerton.edu.

    # # #

    Photo Caption:
    Junely Merwin, a Cal State Fullerton graduate student and former foster youth who participated in CSUF’s Guardian Scholars Program





    California State University, Fullerton

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  • Compact, swift typhoons are more impacted by global warming.

    Compact, swift typhoons are more impacted by global warming.

    Newswise — A group from Nagoya University in Japan has found that larger, slower-moving typhoons are more likely to be resilient against global warming. However, compact, faster-moving storms are more likely to be sensitive. These findings suggest an improved method to project the strength of typhoons under global warming conditions. Their report was published in Geophysical Research Letters.

    Tropical cyclones are among the most dangerous weather systems in the world, causing disruption, damage, and death in East Asia. As global temperatures increase, so does the threat of typhoons. But projecting the strength and structure of such storms also becomes more difficult. Understanding changes in ocean response is essential to mitigate the worst effects of typhoons.

    One way to understand tropical cyclones is to examine the relationship between the atmosphere and the ocean. The ocean-atmosphere coupling relationship influences weather patterns, ocean circulation, and climate variability.

    This is especially important for typhoons as the intensity of tropical cyclones is linked to increases in sea surface temperature (SST). As the size of a cyclone increases, SST decreases, limiting its intensity. However, under global warming, the SST is higher. As a result, this could make a typhoon last longer.

    “The rise in sea temperatures is concerning because a typical compact, fast-moving storm, for example Typhoon Faxai in 2019, caused severe damage to eastern Japan,” warned lead researcher Sachie Kanada. “Our findings show the intensity of such typhoons can strengthen under global warming conditions.”

    To understand how global warming can affect typhoons, Kanada and fellow researcher Hidenori Aiki examined the buffering effect of atmosphere-ocean coupling on typhoons. They used the latest simulator of weather systems, an atmosphere-ocean model called CReSS-NHOES, to evaluate the effect of atmosphere ocean coupling on changes in the intensity of strong typhoons. CReSS-NHOES combines the cloud simulation model CReSS, developed at Nagoya University, with the oceanographic model NHOES, developed by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology.

    The researchers used CReSS-NHOES to examine four powerful, but different-sized, typhoons in recent years: Trami (2018), Faxai (2019), Hagibis (2019), and Haishen (2020). These typhoons were all devastating; Trami and Faxai caused billions of dollars of damage and Hagibis led to the deaths of 118 people.

    Kanada and Aiki evaluated three scenarios: preindustrial era climate, a 2°C increase in SST, and a 4°C increase in SST. “We found that the degree to which typhoons strengthened per 1°C rise in SST varies significantly from typhoon to typhoon,” said Kanada. She was surprised by the change in hPa, a unit of pressure used in meteorology to measure atmospheric pressure and which represents the strength and intensity of a storm. “A typhoon, such as Trami, strengthens by only 3.1 hPa, while Faxai strengthens by as much as 16.2 hPa with a 1°C rise in SST.”

    The results of this study suggest that the atmosphere-ocean coupling effect buffers changes in storm intensity associated with global warming. But typhoons of different sizes may be affected differently. Storms with large eyes and small movement speeds cause SST to drop near their center, hindering their development. However, storms with small eyes and high movement speeds move away from the SST occurence. Such typhoons maintain constant heat at their center, increasing in intensity.

    Using these findings, the researchers created a new model to project the effect of tropical cyclones. They used a simple parameter called nondimensional storm speed (S0). Their model showed that S0 could distinguish between potentially destructive storms that are likely to strengthen under global warming and those that are resilient to the effects of global warming.

    “Currently, climate change projection research on typhoon intensity is conducted using models with coarse horizontal resolution or atmosphere-only models, which have difficulty reproducing the intensity and structure of strong typhoons,” Kanada explains. “This research using a high-resolution coupled regional atmosphere-ocean model can reproduce the intensity and structure of strong typhoons and the response of the ocean with high accuracy, so is expected to contribute not only to the quantitative projection of typhoon intensity under a warming climate, but also to the improvement of the accuracy of current typhoon intensity forecasts.”

    https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL105659

    Nagoya University

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  • Single Dose Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine (TCV) Provides Lasting Efficacy in Children

    Single Dose Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine (TCV) Provides Lasting Efficacy in Children

    Newswise — A single dose of the typhoid conjugate vaccine, Typbar TCV®, provides lasting efficacy in preventing typhoid fever in children ages 9 months to 12 years old, according to a new study conducted by researchers at University of Maryland School of Medicine’s (UMSOM) Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health (CVD) and led by in-country partners at the Malawi-Liverpool Wellcome Trust (MLW) Clinical Research Programme.

    Results from the phase 3 clinical study were published today in The Lancet.

    The research team enrolled more than 28,000 healthy children in Malawi and randomly assigned about half the group to receive the TCV and the other half to receive a meningococcal capsular group A conjugate (MenA) control vaccine. During the more than four years of follow-up, 24 children in the TCV group and 110 in the MenA group developed typhoid fever, which was confirmed via blood culture. That resulted in an efficacy of 78.3 percent in the TCV group, with one case of typhoid prevented for every 163 children vaccinated. TCV was effective in all age groups and over the study period – which ended in 2022 – vaccine efficacy remained strong, decreasing by only 1.3 percent per year.

    Typhoid fever causes more than 9 million illnesses and at least 110,000 deaths worldwide every year, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and southeast Asia. It is a contagious bacterial infection that occurs from consuming contaminated food or beverages. Symptoms include nausea, fever, and abdominal pain that, if left untreated, can be deadly.

    “These findings have significant implications for identification of the contribution of TCVs in the control and potential elimination of typhoid fever in endemic settings,” wrote the authors of a commentary published in The Lancet alongside the study.

    In May 2023, the Malawi government launched a national rollout of the TCV in children under 15 years. Going forward, all children in Malawi will receive TCV at nine months of age as part of the routine immunization schedule.

     “The newly published study supports the long-lasting impacts of a single shot of TCV, even in the youngest children, and offers hope of preventing typhoid in the most vulnerable children,” said Kathleen Neuzil, MD, MPH, CVD Director, the Myron M. Levine, MD, DTPH, Professor in Vaccinology at UMSOM and coauthor of the current study.  “We could not have had a better partner in this endeavor than MLW, whose long-standing excellence in typhoid research and strong surveillance infrastructure made this study possible.”

    “The CVD’s outstanding record of generating data to accelerate public health decisions continues with this landmark study,” said UMSOM Dean Mark T. Gladwin, MD, Vice President for Medical Affairs, University of Maryland, Baltimore, and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor. “The research could not come at a more critical time when Malawi and other African countries are struggling with climate change, extreme weather events and increased urbanization patterns, which are likely to contribute to increases in enteric diseases, including typhoid.”

    TyVAC is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Typbar TCV® is licensed by Bharat Biotech International Limited, Hyderabad, India.

    About the University of Maryland School of Medicine

    Now in its third century, the University of Maryland School of Medicine was chartered in 1807 as the first public medical school in the United States. It continues today as one of the fastest growing, top-tier biomedical research enterprises in the world — with 46 academic departments, centers, institutes, and programs, and a faculty of more than 3,000 physicians, scientists, and allied health professionals, including members of the National Academy of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences, and a distinguished two-time winner of the Albert E. Lasker Award in Medical Research. With an operating budget of more than $1.2 billion, the School of Medicine works closely in partnership with the University of Maryland Medical Center and Medical System to provide research-intensive, academic, and clinically based care for nearly 2 million patients each year. The School of Medicine has more than $500 million in extramural funding, with most of its academic departments highly ranked among all medical schools in the nation in research funding. As one of the seven professional schools that make up the University of Maryland, Baltimore campus, the School of Medicine has a total population of nearly 9,000 faculty and staff, including 2,500 students, trainees, residents, and fellows. The School of Medicine, which ranks as the 8th highest among public medical schools in research productivity (according to the Association of American Medical Colleges profile) is an innovator in translational medicine, with 606 active patents and 52 start-up companies. In the latest U.S. News & World Report ranking of the Best Medical Schools, published in 2023, the UM School of Medicine is ranked #10 among the 92 public medical schools in the U.S., and in the top 16 percent (#32) of all 192 public and private U.S. medical schools. The School of Medicine works locally, nationally, and globally, with research and treatment facilities in 36 countries around the world. Visit medschool.umaryland.edu

    About the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health at the University of Maryland School of Medicine

    For over 40 years, researchers in the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health (CVD) have worked domestically and internationally to develop, test, and deploy vaccines to aid the world’s underserved populations. CVD is an academic enterprise engaged in the full range of infectious disease intervention from basic laboratory research through vaccine development, pre-clinical and clinical evaluation, large-scale pre-licensure field studies, and post-licensure assessments. CVD has created and tested vaccines against cholera, typhoid fever, paratyphoid fever, non-typhoidal Salmonella disease, shigellosis (bacillary dysentery), Escherichia coli diarrhea, nosocomial pathogens, tularemia, influenza, coronaviruses, malaria, and other infectious diseases. CVD’s research covers the broader goal of improving global health by conducting innovative, leading research in Baltimore and around the world. Our researchers are developing new and improved ways to diagnose, prevent, treat, control, and eliminate diseases of global impact, including COVID-19. In addition, CVD’s work focuses on the ever-growing challenge of antimicrobial resistance.

    University of Maryland School of Medicine

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  • New research finds presence of dangerous airborne neurotoxin near Great Salt Lake

    New research finds presence of dangerous airborne neurotoxin near Great Salt Lake

    Newswise — Pioneering new research by a Bowling Green State University environmental toxicologist has identified a potential connection between a reduction in Utah’s Great Salt Lake and long-term consequences for human health.

    Dr. James Metcalf, an associate professor of Biological Sciences at BGSU, teamed with partners of the Wyoming non-profit institute Brain Chemistry Labs to collect air and water samples from the Great Salt Lake during three months in 2022, the results of which showed an alarming result of water-level decrease. 

    The collected samples indicated an increased presence of BMAA, an airborne neurotoxin highly correlated to increased levels of ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease.

    The Great Salt Lake has lost 71% of its surface area since 1984, exposing increasingly more lakebed – which likely has significant air quality implications for the greater region surrounding Salt Lake City, a metropolitan area with 2.5 million residents.

    “In terms of public health, the fact that we’re exposing more lakebed could result in more toxins being made airborne, and more toxins being made airborne could result in more people being exposed,” Metcalf said. “Increased exposure may affect long-term diseases like ALS and Alzheimer’s.”

    The research recently was published in the academic journal Toxins, and Metcalf presented the findings during a press conference at the Utah State Capitol building in Salt Lake City. 

    To collect data, the research team employed a trained helicopter pilot in Ogden, Utah, to take them to sample multiple sites across the region during August, September and October of 2022. Following collection, they tested samples using mass spectrometry, which revealed a complex set of issues facing the Great Salt Lake. 

    Due to the nature of the region – an arid climate with a major city in a valley near the Rocky Mountains – smog from vehicle exhaust already has been an issue in Utah, but the research found an additional air quality concern.

    “There were two things that were surprising,” Metcalf said. “One is that the toxins in the air and the toxins immediately below in the lakebed didn’t really match up, so it suggested that the toxin in the air may be coming from a broader swath of the lake as well. The second is that we were surprised at how much toxin was in some of those air samples.”

    Metcalf’s research also has implications close to home for BGSU and the larger Great Lakes region. In 2014, cyanobacteria fed by runoff produced the toxin microcystin, which temporarily caused the city of Toledo’s water supply to be unsuitable for public consumption. 

    Understanding how these toxins operate, where they are liable to be found and how to mitigate their effects is critical to public health, Metcalf said. 

    “We know from 2014 that cyanobacteria can really shut down these large lakes,” Metcalf said. “The research suggests that toxins like microcystin and BMAA are quite common in the environment, especially in the environments where nutrients and runoff are present, so we’re potentially exposed from a wide range of places and we need to understand what’s there.  

    “We need to understand what’s in the air and what’s in the water.”

    In the case of the Great Salt Lake, Metcalf said several factors have contributed to the decreased surface area and increased exposure of the lakebed. 

    Because the Great Salt Lake is terminal – other waterways run into, but not out of, the lake – it is particularly susceptible to reductions from contributing factors like less snow and drought conditions exacerbated by climate change, and also from overuse of water by humans.  

    Combined, these factors could be leading to an increase of airborne BMAA.

    “Climate change will have a big effect on things like snowpacks that feed the Great Salt Lake, but secondly, it’s also about how we use water,” Metcalf said. “Water is a finite resource that we need to live. Perhaps we don’t need lush green lawns in places where lush green lawns are not suitable. The Great Salt Lake is in a desert, so I think people need to think about how we use fresh water, how we reuse wastewater and how we live our lives.”

    Metcalf hopes to replicate the study near Lake Erie to compare the behavior of toxins in a different climate to better understand how they operate and how they can be mitigated. 

    Though more information is needed, Metcalf said the results demonstrate the importance of protecting our natural resources.

    “If we can protect environmental health, we can protect human health,” Metcalf said. “Those two things are so intertwined that if you protect one, the other benefits. We need to do more analyses, more samplings and more time points, but this research is a signal to say something might be awry.”

    Bowling Green State University

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  • Live animal transport regulations not ‘fit for purpose’, major international study finds

    Live animal transport regulations not ‘fit for purpose’, major international study finds

    Newswise — A ‘fitness check’ of regulations in five countries meant to protect animals during transportation, has deemed that they all fall short of fully protecting animals during transport. Findings from this interdisciplinary work involving animal welfare scientists and a law lecturer which compared animal transport rules designed to protect the billions of livestock that are transported on lengthy journeys in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, EU (including UK) and US, highlights serious failures.

    The study, published in Royal Society Open Science today [Wednesday 24 January], and involving researchers from the Universities of Bristol, Essex and British Columbia (Canada), is the first comprehensive fitness check of live animal transportation regulations in five English-speaking Western countries to assess whether the regulatory framework for a policy sector is fit for purpose.

    Live animal transport, which affects most farm animals at some point during their lifetime, is a stressful experience whereby animals are often subjected to long transport times during which they are prevented from drinking, eating and resting. For example, in Canada some animals can be transported for 36 hours without feed, water and rest.

    Researchers investigated four major risk factors associated with live animal transportation – fitness for transport, journey duration, climatic conditions and space allowances – and explored how regulations were structured to prevent animal welfare issues.

    Results from this research showed that all countries could improve and draw key future directions for new policies. For instance, no countries adopt maximum journey duration for all animals, meaning that animals can sometimes be transported for days. Not all countries mandate regular rest stops for long journeys but those that do often mandate rest stop times that are too short to allow meaningful recovery. Updating the transport regulations using the most recent science would be an important step towards improved animal welfare during transport, bringing the livestock industries more in line with societal values.

    The team also considered recent and proposed changes to the regulations. These included reviewed changes that have been announced but not yet been translated into legislation or different options that are being considered. For instance, last month (December 2023), a Bill including a ban on the export of livestock for slaughter and fattening from Great Britain (i.e., England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland) was introduced in Parliament but may only target a minority of animals being exported.

    Dr Ben Lecorps, study co-author and Animal Welfare Lecturer in the Bristol Veterinary School, said: “Our findings indicate that regulations are often insufficient or too vague to ensure they are fit for purpose. All studied countries fall short in guaranteeing adequate protection to livestock during transport. Whilst this does not mean that all animals transported will experience serious harms, major risk factors such as excessively long journeys, or journeys during hot weather, are not being addressed to a satisfactory level.”

    Dr Eugénie Duval, study co-author and Lecturer in Law at the Essex Law School, added: “Even if they do not necessarily reflect the latest scientific evidence, some regulations are more specific than others. If we were to take the best from each regulatory framework (e.g. fitness for transport in Canada; providing species-specific thresholds for the temperature inside vehicles in the EU) and apply some of the propositions made by some countries (e.g. a ban of export outside the EU borders: proposition of some EU Member States), the ensuing regulations would be a major step closer to safeguarding animal welfare during transportation.”

    The study was funded by a grant awarded to ED and MvK by the Humane Slaughter Association and the Hans Sigrist Research Prize awarded to MvK by the Hans Sigrist Stiftung Foundation.

    Paper

    ‘Are regulations addressing farm animal welfare issues during live transportation fit for purpose? A multi-country jurisdictional check’ by Eugénie Duval, Benjamin Lecorps, Marina A.G. von Keyserlingk in Royal Society Open Science [open access]

    University of Bristol

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  • The cause of recent cold waves over East Asia and North America was in the mid-latitude ocean fronts

    The cause of recent cold waves over East Asia and North America was in the mid-latitude ocean fronts

    Newswise — If the world is warming, why are our winters getting colder? Indeed, East Asia and North America have experienced frequent extreme weather events since the 2000s that defy average climate change projections. Many experts have blamed Arctic warming and a weakening jet stream due to declining Arctic sea ice, but climate model experiments have not adequately demonstrated their validity. The massive power outage in Texas in February 2021 was caused by an unusual cold snap, and climate models are needed to accurately predict the risk of extreme weather events in order to prevent massive socioeconomic damage. In particular, climate technology leaders have recently set the ability to predict the climate of the next decade or so as an important goal.

    The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that senior researcher Mi-Kyung Sung of the Sustainable Environment Research Center and professor Soon-Il An of the Center for Irreversible Climate Change at Yonsei University (President Seung-hwan Seo) have jointly discovered the role of mid-latitude oceans as a source of anomalous waves that are particularly frequent in East Asia and North America, paving the way for a mid- to long-term response to winter climate change.

    Ocean currents have a major impact on the weather and climate of neighboring countries as they transport not only suspended and dissolved matter but also heat energy. In particular, regions where temperatures change rapidly in a narrow latitudinal band, such as the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic Ocean and the downstream region of the Kuroshio Current in the Pacific Ocean, are called “ocean fronts,” and the KIST-Yonsei joint research team attributes the atmospheric wave response to the excessive accumulation of heat in these ocean fronts as the cause of the increase in extreme cold waves. From the early 2000s until recently, anomalous cold trend in East Asia coincided with the accumulation of heat near the Gulf Stream in the North Atlantic, and that in North America coincided with the intensification of heat accumulation near the Kuroshio Current. The oceanic frontal region acts as a thermostat to control the frequency of winter cold waves and anomalous high temperatures.

    The process of heat accumulation in oceanic frontal regions lasts from years to decades. During this time, a warming hiatus can occur in the continental regions that bucks the global warming trend. Conversely, during decades of ocean frontal cooling, continental regions appear to experience a sharp acceleration of warming. This suggests that the recent decadal cooling trend is essentially reinforced by temporary natural variability in the global climate system, and that we can expect unseasonably warm winter weather to become more prevalent as the heat buildup in the ocean front is relieved. These results are also evident in climate model experiments that vary the amount of heat accumulation near ocean fronts, showing that observations and climate model experiments are consistent in their conclusions, in contrast to conventional sea ice theory. This highlights the importance of accurately simulating ocean front variability in climate models to improve our ability to predict medium- and long-term climate change over the next decade.

    As global warming intensifies in the future and changes the structure of the ocean, these regional climate variations could change dramatically. Climate model experiments with increased greenhouse gases have shown that North America is likely to experience shorter and fewer warming hiatus, while East Asia is likely to experience more frequent intersections between warming hiatus and acceleration. These different continental responses are driven by the different oceanic responses of the Kuroshio Current and the Gulf Stream to global warming.

    “Applying the effects of ocean fronts revealed in this research to global warming climate models can improve climate change forecasts for the near future,” said Dr. Mi-Kyung Sung of KIST. “It will provide important references for long-term forecasts of winter energy demand and the construction of climate change response infrastructure to prevent climate disasters such as the 2021 Texas power outage.”

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    KIST was established in 1966 as the first government-funded research institute in Korea. KIST now strives to solve national and social challenges and secure growth engines through leading and innovative research. For more information, please visit KIST’s website at https://eng.kist.re.kr/

    The research, which was funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT (Minister Jong-ho Lee) through the Mid-Career Researcher Support Project (2021R1A2C1003934), the Leading Research Center Support Project (2018R1A5A1024958), and the Ultra-High Performance Computing Utilization Advancement Project (2022M3K3A1094114), was published on November 27 in the international journal Nature Communications

    National Research Council of Science and Technology

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  • MSU expert: What an earlier primary means for Michigan and the 2024 election

    MSU expert: What an earlier primary means for Michigan and the 2024 election

    BYLINE: Matt Grossmann

    Newswise — MSU has a satellite uplink/LTN TV studio and Comrex line for radio interviews upon request. 

    EAST LANSING, Mich. – The 2024 presidential election is underway with the first contests being Iowa and New Hampshire. While Iowa holds caucuses, New Hampshire holds an open primary — illustrating that the way states assign their delegates isn’t always the same. For this election, Michigan’s contests are now sooner, on Feb. 27 and March 2 — with Michigan Republicans now holding both a primary and caucus. So, how does it all work?

    Matt Grossmann is the director of Michigan State University’s Institute for Public Policy and Social Research, as well as a professor in the Department of Political Science in the College of Social Science. Grossmann is an expert in both state and national politics. He answers questions about how to understand different systems and the role Michigan will play in 2024.

    How do the presidential primaries work for Republicans and Democrats?

    Officially, Democrats and Republicans select their nominees at national conventions this summer. The presidential nomination process evolved out of reforms to the delegate selection process for those conventions, which now means delegates are overwhelmingly selected based on presidential primary results. From the voter’s perspective, it often looks like any other election where you select your preferred candidate. But the parties still have power to coordinate their rules and selection procedures. That means there are still party differences, such as which states are allowed to go earlier in the process and whether the state winner gets all of the delegates from that state. Usually, the winner is determined when all other candidates drop out after it becomes infeasible for them to gain enough delegates to win. Officially, the winner needs to accumulate a majority of delegates. But the winners will likely be clear after most states vote early in the process.

    How does a caucus work?

    A caucus is a party meeting that can include the selection of delegates. The Iowa caucuses evolved out of a three-round process for selecting delegates to county conventions to select delegates to the state convention, who select delegates to the national convention. Caucuses now play a smaller role in the process, with most delegates selected by primaries. How delegates are awarded differs by state.

    How is a general primary different from a caucus and why does format vary by state?

    A primary is a normal election to select a party nominee, but the presidential primaries officially select delegates affiliated with the candidates. To organize a primary for delegate selection, a state party has to coordinate with the rules of their state and their national party. States often like to go early in the process (while several candidates are still in the race and they might influence other states), but the national parties set the rules on whether those voting early are selecting delegates to the national convention. This year, the Democratic Party approved Michigan moving earlier in the process and the Michigan Legislature (controlled by Democrats) moved our election date earlier in the process. But there is not really a contest on the Democratic side. Republicans had to adapt to this process because their national party did not approve a move earlier in the process.

    Why do Michigan Republicans have a hybrid caucus this election and how does it work?

    Michigan Republicans are trying to adapt to their national party rules and the state government-held election (coordinated by Democrats). There are also parts of the party that would like voters to have less of a role in nominating candidates compared to those more involved in party organizing and activism. The idea behind a hybrid system is to have a meaningful election where voters have a role in selecting the nominee, but official delegate selection can still conform to national rules and enable party activists to have a role in the process. 

    What are the important dates in Michigan’s voting process?

    Both parties will hold their primaries on Tuesday, Feb. 27 and the Republicans will have their caucus on Saturday, March 2, which awards most of the party’s delegates. Michigan voters who want to participate must ensure they are registered for the primary by Monday, Feb. 12. Absentee ballots requested by mail must be done so by Friday, Feb. 23. It is also important to know that Michigan now has early in-person voting, which communities must start by Saturday, Feb. 17. 

    Will Michigan’s earlier primary date have a significant effect on the presidential race?

    On the Democratic side, there is not much of a race against the incumbent president. But Michigan has an opportunity to set the terms for future elections, showing that it can become engaged, with diverse interests, and earn the right to vote early in the process in 2028. On the Republican side, it will depend on whether candidates other than Donald Trump remain in the process and how viable they are by the time Michiganders vote. Since Michigan does not have party registration, voters will be able to participate in the primary of their choice, which has provided an incentive for individuals to vote in the contest that presents the most uncertainty.

    What are some fun facts about previous presidential primaries?

     

    1. Barak Obama was not on the primary ballot in 2008 because Michigan jumped in line, holding a primary before national party rules allowed it on the Democratic side. Eventually, the delegates were still seated — but only after it was clear that they would not put Hillary Clinton over Obama.
    2. In 2016, Bernie Sanders unexpectedly defeated Hillary Clinton in the Michigan primary, prolonging the Democratic contest, in part because many Democratic-leaning voters decided to vote in the Republican contest.
    3. John McCain won the 2000 Michigan Republican primary over George W. Bush — Michigan was one of only seven states where McCain won over Bush. 

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    Michigan State University has been advancing the common good with uncommon will for more than 165 years. One of the world’s leading public research universities, MSU pushes the boundaries of discovery to make a better, safer, healthier world for all while providing life-changing opportunities to a diverse and inclusive academic community through more than 400 programs of study in 17 degree-granting colleges.

    For MSU news on the web, go to MSUToday or twitter.com/MSUnews.

    Michigan State University

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  • New Criteria for Sepsis in Children Based on Organ Dysfunction

    New Criteria for Sepsis in Children Based on Organ Dysfunction

    Newswise — Clinician-scientists from Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago were among a diverse, international group of experts tasked by the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) with developing and validating new data-based criteria for sepsis in children. Sepsis is a major public heath burden, claiming the lives of over 3.3 million children worldwide every year. The new pediatric sepsis criteria – called the Phoenix criteria – follow the paradigm shift in the recent adult criteria that define sepsis as severe response to infection involving organ dysfunction, as opposed to an earlier focus on systemic inflammation. The new pediatric sepsis criteria and their development are presented in two papers published in JAMA on January 21, 2024, and concurrently announced at the SCCM Critical Care Congress in Phoenix, Arizona.

    “The last pediatric sepsis criteria were developed nearly 20 years ago and were based on expert opinion, whereas the new criteria we derived are based on data from electronic health records and analysis of more than 3 million pediatric healthcare encounters from 10 hospitals around the world, including in low-resource settings,” said lead author of one of the papers L. Nelson Sanchez-Pinto, MD, MBI, critical care physician at Lurie Children’s who co-led the data group of the SCCM task force with Tellen D. Bennett, MD, MS, at the University of Colorado. “We used a machine learning approach to narrow down elements that were most effective in identifying children at high risk of dying from organ dysfunction in the setting of an infection. The criteria we developed rely on four systems – cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological and coagulation. These criteria are better than the old ones at identifying children with infections at higher risk of poor outcomes and are globally applicable, including in low-resource settings.”

    Dr. Sanchez-Pinto is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, as well as Warren and Eloise Batts Research Scholar at Lurie Children’s. His data-driven work to derive the new sepsis criteria was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

    The SCCM leadership team that assembled the task force on pediatric sepsis included Lauren Sorce, PhD, RN, CPNP-AC/PC, FCCM, FAAN, Founders’ Board Nurse Scientist and Associate Director of Nursing Research at Lurie Children’s, as well as Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Dr. Sorce has since been named President of SCCM.

    The pediatric sepsis task force also included Elizabeth Alpern, MD, MSCE, Division Head of Emergency Medicine at Lurie Children’s and Professor of Pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

    Research at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago is conducted through Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute, which is focused on improving child health, transforming pediatric medicine and ensuring healthier futures through the relentless pursuit of knowledge. Lurie Children’s is a nonprofit organization committed to providing access to exceptional care for every child. It is ranked as one of the nation’s top children’s hospitals by U.S. News & World Report. Lurie Children’s is the pediatric training ground for Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

    Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

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