Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Hypnosis to manage musculoskeletal and neuropathic chronic pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2022 Feb 19:104591. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2022.104591. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to identify and quantify the current available evidence of hypnosis efficacy to manage pain in patients with chronic musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain. Randomized Control Trials (RCTs) with hypnosis and/or self-hypnosis treatment used to manage musculoskeletal and/or neuropathic chronic pain in adults and assessing pain intensity were included. Reviews, meta-analyses, non-randomized clinical trials, case reports and meeting abstracts were excluded. Five databases, up until May 13th 2021, were used to search for RCTs using hypnosis to manage chronic musculoskeletal and/or neuropathic pain. The protocol is registered on PROSPERO register (CRD42020180298) and no specific funding was received for this review. The risk of bias asessement was conducted according to the revised Cochrane risk of bias tool for randomized control trials (RoB 2.0). Nine eligible RCTs including a total of 530 participants were considered. The main analyses showed a moderate decrease in pain intensity (Hedge’s g: -0.42; p=0.025 after intervention, Hedge’s g: -0.37; p=0.027 after short-term follow-up) and pain interference (Hedge’s g: -0.39; p=0.029) following hypnosis compared to control interventions. A significant moderate to large effect size of hypnosis compared to controls was found for at 8 sessions or more (Hedge’s g: -0.555; p=0.034), compared to a small and not statistically significant effect for fewer than 8 sessions (Hedge’s g: -0.299; p=0.19). These findings suggest that a hypnosis treatment lasting a minimum of 8 sessions could offer an effective complementary approach to manage chronic musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain. Future research is needed to delineate the relevance of hypnosis in practice and its most efficient prescription.

PMID:35192910 | DOI:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2022.104591

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

The impact of COVID-19 vaccination on case fatality rates in a city in Southern Brazil

Am J Infect Control. 2022 Feb 19:S0196-6553(22)00095-5. doi: 10.1016/j.ajic.2022.02.015. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have established that vaccination plays a significant role in reducing COVID-19-related deaths. Here, we investigated differences in COVID-19 case fatality rates (CFRs) among vaccinated and unvaccinated populations, and analyzed whether the age composition of confirmed cases has a significant effect on the variations in the observed CFRs across these groups.

METHODS: The study considered 59,853 confirmed cases and 1,687 deaths from COVID-19, reported between January 1st to October 20th, 2021, by the Health Department of Londrina, a city in Southern Brazil. We used Negative Binomial regression models to estimate CFRs according to vaccination status and age range.

RESULTS: There are significant differences between the CFR for fully vaccinated and unvaccinated populations (IRR=0.596, 95% CI [0.460 – 0.772], p<0.001). Vaccinated populations experience fatality rates 40.4% lower than non-vaccinated. In addition, the age composition of confirmed cases explains more than two-thirds of the variation in the CFR between these two groups.

CONCLUSION: Our novel findings reinforce the importance of vaccination as an essential public health measure for reducing COVID-19 fatality rates in all age groups. The results also provide means for accurately assessing differences in CFRs across vaccinated and unvaccinated populations. Such assessment is essential to inform and determine appropriate containment and mitigation interventions in Brazil and elsewhere.

PMID:35192917 | DOI:10.1016/j.ajic.2022.02.015

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Clinical and OCT assessment of application modes of a universal adhesive in a 12-month RCT

J Dent. 2022 Feb 19:104068. doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104068. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate a universal adhesive clinically using FDI criteria and by optical coherence tomography (OCT).

METHODS: In 50 patients, three or four non-carious cervical lesions (NCCL) were restored with composite (Venus® Diamond Flow, Kulzer) using iBond® Universal (iBU, Kulzer) applied in self-etch (iBU-SE, n=50), selective-enamel-etch (iBU-SEE, n=29) or etch-and-rinse mode (iBU-ER, n=50) and the reference OptiBond™ FL (OFL, Kerr, n=50). Restorations were imaged by SD-OCT. The weighted mean length of interfacial adhesive defects (AD, %) was quantified per restoration immediately after placement (t0), simultaneously with clinical assessment (FDI criteria) after 14 days (t1), 6 (t2) and 12 months (t3). Data were statistically analyzed (McNemar-/Wilcoxon-/Mann-Whitney-U-test (α=0.05), Kaplan-Meier survival curves).

RESULTS: After 12 months, cumulative failure rates were lower with iBU-SE (0.0%; p=0.016), iBU-SEE (0.0%; p=0.125), and iBU-ER (2.1%; p=0.070; loss t3) compared to OFL (16.7%; losses t2, t3). Generally, marginal adaptation decreased (pi<0.001) and marginal staining increased (pi≤0.031), without significant group differences (pi>0.064). AD increased in all groups (pi<0.001). At enamel, AD appeared more extended with iBU-SE vs. iBU-SEE (t2-t3; pi≤0.005), iBU-ER (t1-t3; pi≤0.051) and OFL (t0-t3; pi≤0.018). At dentin/cement iBU generally caused fewer defects than OFL (t1-t3; pi≤0.010) and with SE vs. ER (t2-t3; pi=0.010).

CONCLUSIONS: In NCCLs, iBU generally provides a more durable bond than OFL. Recommended mode is SEE. Clinic and OCT provided comparable results. OCT has higher statistical power, shows group differences earlier and specifically for the different hard tooth tissues.

CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The universal adhesive iBU was superior against the reference OFL in NCCLs. It can be recommended with SEE. Evaluation of interfacial adhesive defects by OCT seems to allow early prediction of adhesives’ clinical performance.

PMID:35192908 | DOI:10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104068

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

A synopsis of modern – day colorectal cancer: Where we stand

Biochim Biophys Acta Rev Cancer. 2022 Feb 19:188699. doi: 10.1016/j.bbcan.2022.188699. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a malignancy in the gastro-intestinal (GI) tract which has very limited treatment options still, despite the vast amount of research undertaken. CRC was first discovered a century ago and is the third-highest cause of global cancer-related deaths. Once diagnosed as a T4 -stage carcinoma, the prognosis extends only up to two years at the best. Although resectable surgery remains the primary safeguard in combatting metastatic CRC, research had focussed on to various therapeutic and disease management strategies, such as stem cell – based therapies, CT, MRI, PET-CT scans, colonography, endoscopy and biologics. The struggle in developing an anti-cancer therapy may be due to its unresolved aetiology comprising of genetic abnormalities, and multiple risk factors in lifestyle, culture, and environment in the globally diverse, human populations. This review aims to summarize the prominent features of CRC which could encourage lifestyle changes and introduce novel clinically – relevant therapeutic strategies to improve its overall management.

PMID:35192881 | DOI:10.1016/j.bbcan.2022.188699

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Objective underpinnings of self-reported sleep quality in middle-aged and older adults: the importance of N2 and wakefulness

Biol Psychol. 2022 Feb 19:108290. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2022.108290. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVES: The measurable aspects of brain function (polysomnography, PSG) that are correlated with sleep satisfaction are poorly understood. Using recent developments in automated sleep scoring, which remove the within- and between-rater error associated with human scoring, we examine whether PSG measures are associated with sleep satisfaction.

DESIGN AND SETTING: A single night of PSG data was compared to contemporaneously collected measures of sleep satisfaction with Random Forest regressions. Whole and partial night PSG data were scored using a novel machine learning algorithm.

PARTICIPANTS: Community-dwelling adults (N=3,165) who participated in the Sleep Heart Health Study.

INTERVENTIONS: None MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Models explained 30% of sleep depth and 27% of sleep restfulness, with a similar top four predictors: minutes of N2 sleep, sleep efficiency, age, and minutes of wake after sleep onset (WASO). With increasing self-reported sleep quality, there was a progressive increase in N2 and decrease in WASO of similar magnitude, without systematic changes in N1, N3 or REM sleep. In comparing those with the best and worst self-reported sleep satisfaction, there was a range of approximately 30minutes more N2, 30minutes less WASO, an improvement of sleep efficiency of 7-8%, and an age span of 3-5 years. Examination of sleep most proximal to morning awakening revealed no greater explanatory power than the whole-night data set.

CONCLUSIONS: Higher N2 and concomitant lower wake is associated with improved sleep satisfaction. Interventions that specifically target these may be suitable for improving the self-reported sleep experience.

PMID:35192907 | DOI:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2022.108290

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Soluble forms of PD-1/PD-L immune checkpoint receptor and ligand in blood serum of breast cancer patients: association with clinical pathologic factors and molecular type of the tumor

Klin Lab Diagn. 2022 Feb 23;67(2):76-80. doi: 10.51620/0869-2084-2022-67-2-76-80.

ABSTRACT

Results of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of the soluble forms of PD-1/PD-L immune checkpoint receptor and ligand (sPD-1 and sPD-L1) in pretreatment blood serum of 88 breast cancer patients at various disease stages aged 30-83 years are presented. The control group included 55 practically healthy women aged 19-82 years. Serum sPD-1 and sPD-L1 levels in breast cancer patients highly significantly (p<0.0001) differ from control and these changes are opposite: soluble receptor level is more than 6-fold decreased, while soluble ligand concentration – 5.5 fold increased. Both markers separately, as well as their ratio demonstrate very high sensitivity (94-100%) and specificity (95-100%) in relation to healthy control. No statistically significant associations of sPD-1 and sPD-L1 levels with clinical stage, individual TNM system criteria, tumor histological structure, grade, receptor status, and molecular type were established. In particular, no significant peculiarities of the markers’ levels in triple negative breast cancer successfully treated with anti-PD-1/PD-L1 preparations were revealed. Long-term follow-up and dynamic studies of sPD-1 and sPD-L1serum levels in the course of treatment are required for evaluation of their independent from clinical and morphological factors prognostic significance and the possibility of application as low invasive tests for prediction and monitoring of corresponding targeted therapy efficiency.

PMID:35192751 | DOI:10.51620/0869-2084-2022-67-2-76-80

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

New prognostic criterion for the outcome of pregnancy in patients with threatening preterm birth

Klin Lab Diagn. 2022 Feb 23;67(2):97-100. doi: 10.51620/0869-2084-2022-67-2-97-100.

ABSTRACT

To identify new criteria for predicting the outcome of pregnancy in women with threatened preterm labor based on the establishment of the characteristics of differentiation and functional activity of memory T-cells in the population of CD8 + T-lymphocytes. The study involved 56 women with threatened preterm labor at 22-34 weeks of pregnancy. Depending on the outcome of pregnancy, patients were divided into 3 groups: Group I included 22 women by premature labor; group II – 34 women whose pregnancy ended by deliver at term. By tricolor flow cytofluorometry method the content of peripheral Tn, Tcm, Tem and Temra cells in CD8+ population was studied. Statistical analysis was carried out using programs «Statistica for Windows 13.0», «Microsoft Excel 2019» and «MedCalc 19.3». Patients with the threat of preterm birth were characterized by a significant increase in the relative content of CD8+ T-lymphocytes in the peripheral blood compared to the control group (p=0.001). When comparing this indicator in the subgroups of women with the threat of preterm birth, it was found that preterm birth was associated with significantly higher relative CD8 + lymphocyte counts (p=0.03) compared to the indicators of the subgroup of women who gave birth on time. When evaluating the results obtained, it was found that the percentage of CD8+Temra GranzymeB-producing cells in the group of patients with threatened preterm birth, whose pregnancy ended in preterm birth, was significantly lower than in the group of women who gave birth on time (p=0.003). The content of Tcm, Tem memory cells producing GranzymeB in the subgroups of women with pregnancy outcomes of timely and preterm birth did not have significant differences compared to the control group. Thus, the prediction of preterm birth is possible with a value of GranzymeB-producing CD8 + Tem equal to 8.2% or less (sensitivity-87.9%, specificity-85%, accuracy-87.9%). Thus, the identification of a new criterion will make it possible to predict preterm birth in a timely manner and promote the choice of optimal pregnancy management tactics, reasonable prevention of fetal respiratory distress syndrome and transfer of a woman to an obstetric hospital designed to provide high-tech care to premature newborns.

PMID:35192755 | DOI:10.51620/0869-2084-2022-67-2-97-100

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

The eigen higher criticism and eigen Berk-Jones tests for multiple trait association studies based on GWAS summary statistics

Genet Epidemiol. 2022 Mar;46(2):89-104. doi: 10.1002/gepi.22439. Epub 2021 Nov 22.

ABSTRACT

In this article, we propose the eigen higher criticism and the eigen Berk-Jones testing procedures to test the association between a single genetic variant and multiple correlated traits based on summary statistics from single-trait genome-wide association studies. Since the association pattern between each genetic variant and multiple traits varies across the whole genome, we further develop an omnibus (OMNI) test using the aggregated Cauchy association test to achieve more robust performance. The p values of our proposed tests can be computed analytically, thus, our methods are appealing in large-scale multiple phenotype association studies. Through extensive simulation studies, we found that all of our proposed tests can maintain the correct type I error rates and our proposed tests have greater power in certain settings. In addition, the OMNI test can always provide robust power performance across a wide range of scenarios. We apply the proposed tests to the Global Lipids Genetics Consortium summary statistics data set and identify additional genetic variants that were missed by the original single-trait analyses. We also develop an R package EBMMT publicly available at https://github.com/Vivian-Liu-Wei64/EBMMT.

PMID:35192735 | DOI:10.1002/gepi.22439

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

A two-sample robust Bayesian Mendelian Randomization method accounting for linkage disequilibrium and idiosyncratic pleiotropy with applications to the COVID-19 outcomes

Genet Epidemiol. 2022 Feb 22. doi: 10.1002/gepi.22445. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Mendelian randomization (MR) is a statistical method exploiting genetic variants as instrumental variables to estimate the causal effect of modifiable risk factors on an outcome of interest. Despite wide uses of various popular two-sample MR methods based on genome-wide association study summary level data, however, those methods could suffer from potential power loss or/and biased inference when the chosen genetic variants are in linkage disequilibrium (LD), and also have relatively large direct effects on the outcome whose distribution might be heavy-tailed which is commonly referred to as the idiosyncratic pleiotropy phenomenon. To resolve those two issues, we propose a novel Robust Bayesian Mendelian Randomization (RBMR) model that uses the more robust multivariate generalized t$t$ -distribution to model such direct effects in a probabilistic model framework which can also incorporate the LD structure explicitly. The generalized t$t$ -distribution can be represented as a Gaussian scaled mixture so that our model parameters can be estimated by the expectation maximization (EM)-type algorithms. We compute the standard errors by calibrating the evidence lower bound using the likelihood ratio test. Through extensive simulation studies, we show that our RBMR has robust performance compared with other competing methods. We further apply our RBMR method to two benchmark data sets and find that RBMR has smaller bias and standard errors. Using our proposed RBMR method, we find that coronary artery disease is associated with increased risk of critically ill coronavirus disease 2019. We also develop a user-friendly R package RBMR (https://github.com/AnqiWang2021/RBMR) for public use.

PMID:35192729 | DOI:10.1002/gepi.22445

Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

Living with stigma and low self-esteem among individuals with burn injuries: a cross-sectional study

J Burn Care Res. 2022 Feb 22:irac023. doi: 10.1093/jbcr/irac023. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Burn injuries are a significant global public health concern. The psychological problems deserve more attention. Research has shown that reducing the stigma and improving the burn patient’s self-esteem are effective means to promote social reintegration. The aim of this study is to explore the relationship between stigma and self-esteem and to examine the independent factors that contribute to with the stigma of burns. The convenience sampling method was used in Guangzhou, China. A cross-sectional study was conducted using the Social Impact Scale, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and a sociodemographic questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, statistical inference, correlation testing, and regression analysis were used to analyze the data among 146 burn survivors. The p-value was set as 0.05. The mean score of SIS was 57.03 ± 6.762. Of the four components of the Social Impact Scale, social rejection had the highest mean score (21.72 ± 3.00). The mean Self-Esteem Scale score was 21.05 ± 2.492, markedly different from the general population. A moderate positive correlation (r = 0.546, p<0.001) was found between stigma and low self-esteem among burn victims. Multiple linear regression analysis identified residence, itching, and Self-Esteem Scale score as significant influencing factors, accounting for 38.5% of the total variance in stigma. Burn survivors reported moderate levels of stigma and low levels of self-esteem. Residence, itching, and Self-Esteem Scale score were significant influencing factors for stigma. To promote recovery of patients with burn injury, it is necessary to eliminate the stigma and improve their self-esteem.

PMID:35192722 | DOI:10.1093/jbcr/irac023