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Liquid plasma versus thawed plasma: Tracking coagulation factor activity changes during storage

Vox Sang. 2026 Mar 23. doi: 10.1111/vox.70248. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Liquid plasma (LQP) stands out as an alternative to thawed plasma (TP) for emergent transfusions due to its longer shelf-life. We aimed to measure fibrinogen, protein C (PC), protein S (PS), factor V (FV), factor VII (FVII) and factor VIII (FVIII) activity in LQP, quantify how these factors’ levels change during storage and characterize how they compare in LQP and TP.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Coagulation factor activities were measured on days 15, 26 and 27 for LQP (n = 26) and Day 5 for TP (n = 31). Bayesian statistics was used to compare coagulation factor activity and quantify changes in activity during storage.

RESULTS: Fibrinogen and PC activity on Day 26 in LQP (LQP26) was comparable to that on Day 5 in TP (TP5) with posterior mean activity of 257 versus 246 mg/dL and 100.4% versus 108.7%, respectively. FV, FVII and FVIII had lower activity in LQP26 compared to TP5, with posterior mean activities of 42.6% versus 72.0%, 55.0% versus 59.7% and 48.8% versus 59.2%, respectively. PS in LQP26 was low, with posterior mean activity of 28.0%, which was less than half that of TP5 at 66.4%. From Day 15 to Day 26, FVII in LQP decreased at a rate of 3.49% per day, whereas fibrinogen, PC, PS, FV and FVIII activity in LQP remained relatively stable.

CONCLUSION: LQP26 has comparable activities of fibrinogen, PC and FVII as TP5, lower activities of FV and PS and slightly lower activity of FVIII. LQP is a viable alternative for use in emergency transfusions and massive transfusion protocols.

PMID:41871962 | DOI:10.1111/vox.70248

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Framing Migrant Drownings in Australia: News Media Representations Through the Lens of Critical Discourse

Health Promot J Austr. 2026 Apr;37(2):e70176. doi: 10.1002/hpja.70176.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Media reporting of migrant drowning deaths can serve multiple purposes, including advocacy, improving data, and supporting inclusive policy development. However, such drownings remain underexamined in both public discourse and academic research. This study investigates how migrants are portrayed in Australian newspaper coverage of drowning between 2020 and 2025, and how these portrayals shape public understanding, reinforce or challenge systemic inequities, and align with the equity goals of the Australian Water Safety Strategy 2030.

METHODS: A total of 82 articles from Australia’s six highest-readership newspapers were analysed using Critical Discourse Analysis guided by Mullet’s General Analytical Framework, alongside Braun and Clarke’s thematic analysis to identify patterns of power, ideology, and representation. Media language was manually coded, and keyword frequencies were tallied to explore how responsibility and risk are framed.

RESULTS: Coverage consistently portrayed migrants as at-risk ‘newcomers’, with official voices represented by lifesaving bodies, councils, and aquatic educators, shaping responses. Drowning risk was often individualised, while structural determinants such as access to lessons or facilities were inconsistently reported. Parallel narratives positioned aquatic participation as a marker of ‘Australian’ identity, implicitly othering migrants. At the same time, some reports highlighted multilingual programs, subsidised lessons, and infrastructure investment, pointing to systemic interventions. These representations both reinforced individual responsibility and underscored structural inequities.

CONCLUSIONS: Australian news media shape public understanding of drowning risk, but coverage tends to emphasise individual adaptation over structural causes. Greater consistency in reporting systemic barriers and prevention initiatives is needed to support equity-oriented water safety strategies. SO WHAT?: Aligning media representation with the Australian Water Safety Strategy 2030 requires greater inclusion of migrant voices, consistent reporting of systemic barriers, and framing prevention in equity-oriented terms. Collaboration between journalists and water safety agencies could help shift coverage from episodic tragedy to sustained public health communication.

PMID:41871948 | DOI:10.1002/hpja.70176

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Stage-dependent gut microbiome and functional signatures across the liver disease spectrum: an integrative multicohort study

Gut. 2026 Mar 23:gutjnl-2025-337436. doi: 10.1136/gutjnl-2025-337436. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The gut-liver axis plays a critical role in liver disease progression; however, how gut microbial ecology and function vary across disease stages remains unclear.

OBJECTIVE: To define stage-specific microbial and functional signatures and evaluate their diagnostic potential.

DESIGN: We analysed faecal samples from 1168 individuals spanning healthy controls, fatty liver, hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma by 16S rRNA sequencing, with a subset (n=141) profiled by shotgun metagenomics. To increase statistical power and enable external validation, 2376 publicly available metagenomic datasets, including 734 liver-related, were integrated. Machine learning-based multicohort analysis was used to identify microbial biomarkers, assess risk factors and classify disease stages.

RESULTS: Microbial diversity declined and a low-richness enterotype expanded with disease severity. Machine learning revealed a discordance in hepatitis, which lacked taxonomic markers but was defined by a conserved functional signature of biosynthetic upregulation. In contrast, advanced stages featured consistent markers like Ligilactobacillus and Veillonella, with strain-level evidence confirming oral-gut transmission. Functional profiling delineated a metabolic continuum from anabolic precursor synthesis in hepatitis to virulence factor production in cirrhosis and putrefactive metabolism in carcinoma. Comparative analysis confirmed that these signatures were distinct from those in non-liver metabolic and oncologic disorders. Importantly, the expansion of oral-derived Veillonella spp and the low-richness enterotype were significantly associated with increased mortality.

CONCLUSION: This large-scale study delineates stage-dependent ecological and functional remodelling of the gut microbiome across liver diseases. These findings highlight the potential of microbiome-based markers for non-invasive diagnosis and prognostic risk stratification in liver diseases.

PMID:41871945 | DOI:10.1136/gutjnl-2025-337436

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Impact of cataract surgery on a delirium-related electroencephalography index in older adults

Br J Ophthalmol. 2026 Mar 23:bjo-2025-329212. doi: 10.1136/bjo-2025-329212. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The bispectral electroencephalography (BSEEG) method is a simple one-channel quantitative electroencephalography approach that yields a single index, with higher scores previously associated with more severe delirium in older adults. We prospectively measured BSEEG scores in 21 patients over 60 years old before and 1 month after cataract surgery. BSEEG scores significantly decreased after surgery (p=0.001), and this decrease significantly correlated with improvement in best-corrected visual acuity (r=0.52; p=0.02). Improved visual function after cataract surgery was associated with lower BSEEG scores.

PMID:41871919 | DOI:10.1136/bjo-2025-329212

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Multiomic characterisation of the clinical efficacy of guselkumab induction therapy in ulcerative colitis

BMJ Open Gastroenterol. 2026 Mar 23;13(1):e002153. doi: 10.1136/bmjgast-2025-002153.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Selective inhibition of interleukin (IL)-23 through antagonism of the IL-23p19 subunit has demonstrated clinical efficacy in inflammatory bowel disease, but the molecular changes underlying the efficacy outcomes have not yet been described. Here, we provide a detailed evaluation of the cellular and molecular changes associated with guselkumab treatment in patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (UC) from the QUASAR Phase IIb induction study.

METHODS: In this double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging induction study, patients (n=313) were randomised (1:1:1) to receive intravenous guselkumab 200 or 400 mg or placebo at weeks 0, 4, and 8. Colon biopsy samples were collected at weeks 0 and 12, enabling molecular profiling by bulk RNA sequencing (RNA-seq, n=257), single-cell RNA sequencing (n=52), and flow cytometry (n=30). Serum proteomic profiling was also performed at weeks 0, 4, and 12 (n=302).

RESULTS: Guselkumab treatment significantly reduced pro-inflammatory serum proteins by week 4 with continued decline through week 12, compared with placebo. Unsupervised analysis of tissue gene modules revealed significant changes in transcriptional states related to pro-inflammatory and epithelial repair pathways, which were most pronounced in patients who achieved histological-endoscopic mucosal improvement (HEMI) at week 12, an important tissue-based end point. Single-cell analyses supported a decrease in the cellular abundance of pro-inflammatory and an increase in mucosal cell types in tissue following treatment.

CONCLUSION: This analysis of guselkumab in UC demonstrated changes in key pathways and cell types that are associated with achieving important clinical end points including HEMI at week 12.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04033445.

PMID:41871904 | DOI:10.1136/bmjgast-2025-002153

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Severe Obesity Management in a Large Academic Health System: A Retrospective Evaluation of Metabolic Bariatric Surgery Counselling Practices

Clin Obes. 2026 Apr;16(2):e70077. doi: 10.1111/cob.70077.

ABSTRACT

Metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) is an effective treatment for severe obesity but remains substantially underutilized. Limited data exist on outpatient counselling patterns preceding surgical uptake. Using electronic health record data, we conducted a 10-year retrospective cohort study of adults with body mass index ≥ 40 kg/m2. The primary outcome was documentation of the MBS discussion. Secondary outcomes included MBS receipt and demographic factors associated with documented discussion. Among 60 574 eligible patients, only 7.6% had documented MBS discussion. Overall, 1.2% underwent MBS. Surgery occurred in 12.1% of patients with documented discussion compared with 0.3% without discussion. Patients with documented discussion were younger (median, 42 vs. 47 years), had higher BMI (median, 46.8 vs. 42.0 kg/m2), and were more often female. Eligible women were more likely than men to have documented discussion (8.7% vs. 5.5%). Black patients had higher discussion rates than White patients, despite known downstream disparities in MBS utilization. Documented MBS discussion is rare but represents a critical inflection point in surgical uptake. Demographic differences in counselling suggest clinician- and system-level factors influence access before referral, highlighting outpatient counselling as a key target to improve equitable MBS utilization.

PMID:41871890 | DOI:10.1111/cob.70077

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Comparing TA-TAVR and SAVR in severe aortic regurgitation: outcomes and valve haemodynamics

Open Heart. 2026 Mar 23;13(1):e003969. doi: 10.1136/openhrt-2026-003969.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has already been recommended for some high-risk patients with aortic valve regurgitation, but there is still a lack of evidence regarding its early-term and medium-term safety and effectiveness compared with surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR).

METHODS: This retrospective study included patients who underwent bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement for severe aortic regurgitation (AR) at a single centre between January 2018 and December 2023. All patients in the TAVR group received the J-Valve system via transapical (TA) approach. Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to balance the groups. The primary endpoint was 2-year all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints included other clinical events, left ventricular (LV) function recovery and prosthesis haemodynamics, assessed by transthoracic echocardiography.

RESULTS: A total of 369 patients (median age 68 years, 26.6% female) were enrolled. Of these, 256 underwent TA-TAVR and 113 underwent SAVR. After 1:1 PSM, 76 matched pairs were included. There were no statistical differences between the groups in all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, stroke, heart failure rehospitalisation, permanent pacemaker implantation or moderate to severe paravalvular leakage at 30 days or 2 years. Before PSM, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) improved in the TAVR group (57% (IQR: 45-63%) vs 61% (IQR: 55-65%), p<0.001), with no significant change in the SAVR group (61% (IQR: 55-65%) vs 62% (IQR: 59-66%), p>0.05). After PSM, LVEF improvement was comparable between groups (+4.0% (IQR: -1.5 to 10.0) vs +2.0% (IQR: -3.0 to 9.5), p=0.430). Haemodynamics was superior in the TAVR group (p<0.001), while regression of LV dimensions was greater in the SAVR group.

CONCLUSION: In patients with severe AR, using the J-Valve for TA-TAVR showed comparable outcomes to SAVR regarding mortality and other clinical events. TAVR provided superior valve haemodynamics and was an effective treatment that significantly improved LV function, especially in high-risk patients.

PMID:41871886 | DOI:10.1136/openhrt-2026-003969

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Identifying postpartum depression subtypes using natural language processing and clinical notes

BMJ Ment Health. 2026 Mar 23;29(1):e302066. doi: 10.1136/bmjment-2025-302066.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Postpartum depression (PPD) remains vastly underdiagnosed, and its clinical heterogeneity is not well understood. Diagnosis codes in electronic health records (EHRs) alone may not identify all PPD cases, highlighting a need for novel detection approaches.

OBJECTIVE: To develop a transformer-based natural language processing (NLP) method to identify patients with PPD from clinical notes in EHRs and to examine demographic and clinical heterogeneity among identified cases.

METHODS: Clinical notes from 64 426 patients who gave birth between 2010 and 2023 at a major US academic medical centre were used to develop and evaluate the NLP method. By augmenting the NLP output with International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9/10) diagnosis codes, three subgroups of individuals with PPD were identified: patients identified by ICD only (PPD-ICD), NLP only (PPD-NLP) and both ICD and NLP (PPD-BOTH). Demographics, mental health and substance use disorders (SUDs), antidepressant treatment, behavioural therapy and healthcare utilisation were compared across PPD subgroups and a non-PPD control group. Longitudinal associations of depression and anxiety were also examined.

FINDINGS: The NLP method identified an additional 29.6% of patients whose clinical notes indicated symptoms suggestive of PPD but who lacked an ICD diagnosis. Significant variation was observed among PPD subgroups in comorbid psychiatric disorders, SUDs, treatment patterns and healthcare utilisation. During the 24 months post-delivery, the PPD-BOTH subgroup exhibited the highest rates of anxiety disorder diagnoses (vs PPD-ICD: OR 1.69, 95% CI 1.49 to 1.93; vs PPD-NLP: OR 4.46, 95% CI 3.82 to 5.22), antidepressant prescriptions (vs PPD-ICD: OR 1.95, 95% CI 1.71 to 2.22; vs PPD-NLP: OR 5.98, 95% CI 5.11 to 7.01) and mental health outpatient visits (vs PPD-ICD: OR 1.45, 95% CI 1.24 to 1.7; vs PPD-NLP: OR 4.94, 95% CI 3.9 to 6.31), suggesting higher symptom severity (all p<0.001). Comorbid depression and anxiety diagnoses were most prevalent during the postpartum period and declined over time.

CONCLUSIONS: Augmenting NLP-based identification with ICD codes yielded more individuals with distinct demographic and clinical profiles, demonstrating the method’s ability to improve case detection and characterise heterogeneity.

CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Given that PPD is underdiagnosed and undertreated, this novel approach demonstrates further potential for NLP in healthcare settings to capture more cases, enabling earlier and more personalised interventions that reach patients who may otherwise be overlooked.

PMID:41871883 | DOI:10.1136/bmjment-2025-302066

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Delays in seeking and reaching care for injured patients in four low-income and middle-income countries: a cohort study

BMJ Glob Health. 2026 Mar 23;11(3):e021659. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2025-021659.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Injury burden is high in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Delays in accessing definitive care after injury beyond the ‘golden’ hour or 2 hours worsen outcomes. We examined delays in accessing definitive healthcare after injury and whether their magnitude and associations differ across four diverse LMICs: Ghana, Pakistan, Rwanda and South Africa.

METHODS: Across 19 hospitals providing definitive care for injuries in urban or rural settings, we enrolled patients with moderate to severe injuries who were hospitalised for at least 12 hours. The time between injury and admission for definitive care and perceived reasons for delays in seeking and reaching care were captured. The association between more than 1-hour delay to reaching definitive care and age, sex, education, wealth, injury mechanism or severity, prior healthcare encounters, ambulance transport, the hospital type and catchment area was evaluated in a multivariable model. Patients’ perceived reasons for delay in seeking and reaching care were described. Findings were compared between countries.

RESULT: Data on delays were available for 8331 patients, of whom 57.3% experienced delays exceeding 1 hour. Prior healthcare encounter before definitive care showed the strongest association with delay (OR: 8.44, 95% CI 7.41 to 9.60). Delays were associated with older age, less education and wealth, greater injury severity, urban (vs rural) catchment area, ambulance transport, injury mechanism due to falls or fire (vs road traffic collision) and tertiary (vs secondary) hospital admission in the adjusted model. Ghana and Rwanda showed the lowest and highest odds of delays compared with South Africa, respectively. Only 18.8% of patients perceived being delayed, most citing unawareness of urgency and ambulance unavailability as reasons.

CONCLUSIONS: Most injured patients do not arrive at definitive care within the critical golden hour, with delays inequitably affecting the population. Improvements in pathways to care are needed to reduce delays across healthcare systems.

PMID:41871872 | DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2025-021659

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Engineering framework for curiosity-driven and humble AI in clinical decision support

BMJ Health Care Inform. 2026 Mar 23;33(1):e101877. doi: 10.1136/bmjhci-2025-101877.

ABSTRACT

We present BODHI (Balanced, Open-minded, Diagnostic, Humble, and Inquisitive), an engineering framework for curiosity driven and humble clinical decision support artificial intelligence (AI) systems. Despite growing capabilities, large language models (LLMs) often express inappropriate confidence, conflating statistical pattern recognition with genuine medical understanding. BODHI addresses this through a dual reflective architecture that: (1) decomposes epistemic uncertainty into task specific dimensions, and (2) constrains model responses using virtue based stance rules derived from a Virtue Activation Matrix. We validate the framework through controlled evaluation on 200 clinical vignettes from HealthBench Hard, assessing GPT-4o-mini and GPT-4.1-mini across 5 random seeds (2000 total observations). Statistical analysis included bootstrap resampling, paired t tests, and effect size computation. BODHI improved overall clinical response quality (GPT-4.1-mini: +16.6 pp, p<0.0001, Cohen’s d=11.56; GPT-4o-mini: +2.2 pp, p<0.0001, Cohen’s d=1.56) and achieved very large effect sizes on curiosity (context seeking rate: Cohen’s d=16.38 and 19.54) and humility (hedging: d=5.80 for GPT-4.1-mini) metrics. Crucially, 97.3% of GPT-4.1-mini responses and 73.5% of GPT-4o-mini responses included appropriate clarifying questions, compared with 7.8% and 0.0% at baseline, demonstrating the framework’s effectiveness in eliciting information gathering behaviour. Findings suggest LLMs can be reliably constrained to operate within epistemic boundaries when provided with structured uncertainty decomposition and virtue aligned response rules, offering a pathway towards safer clinical AI deployment.

PMID:41871866 | DOI:10.1136/bmjhci-2025-101877