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Safety and effectiveness of tirzepatide during Ramadan fasting: Real-world evidence from patients with type 2 diabetes in Bangladesh

Diabetes Obes Metab. 2025 Dec 4. doi: 10.1111/dom.70343. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Ramadan fasting poses challenges for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) due to increased risks of hypoglycemia and metabolic fluctuations. Tirzepatide, a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist, has shown marked efficacy in glycemic control and weight reduction. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tirzepatide among Bangladeshi patients with T2DM during Ramadan fasting.

METHODS: This prospective, multicentre, real-world evidence study included 109 adult patients with T2DM who intended to fast during Ramadan and were prescribed tirzepatide 2.5 mg weekly, either as monotherapy or in combination with other anti-hyperglycemic agents. Data on glycemic parameters, anthropometrics, blood pressure, lipid profile, renal and liver function were collected at 2-6 weeks before Ramadan and at 2-6 weeks after the end of Ramadan, along with incidences of adverse events. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 25.0.

RESULTS: The mean age of the study participants was 40.7 ± 12.8 (SD) years with female predominance (69.7%). About 86.7% of the participants were obese. The mean HbA1c significantly decreased from 7.6% (before Ramadan) to 6.5% (after Ramadan) (mean change: -1.1%; p <0.001). Fasting plasma glucose and 2-h postprandial glucose also showed significant reductions by -2 mmol/L and – 3.8 mmol/L, respectively (both p <0.001). Mean body weight reduction was 5.3 ± 3.9 kg (6.3% of baseline; p <0.001). Mild gastrointestinal events occurred in ~12% of participants, with no hypoglycemia reported.

CONCLUSION: Tirzepatide demonstrated significant improvements in glycaemic control and body weight, with good tolerability, among patients with type 2 diabetes in Bangladesh who fasted during Ramadan.

PMID:41342185 | DOI:10.1111/dom.70343

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Lung Cancer Diagnosis From Computed Tomography Images Using Deep Learning Algorithms With Random Pixel Swap Data Augmentation: Algorithm Development and Validation Study

JMIR Bioinform Biotechnol. 2025 Sep 3;6:e68848. doi: 10.2196/68848.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Deep learning (DL) shows promise for automated lung cancer diagnosis, but limited clinical data can restrict performance. While data augmentation (DA) helps, existing methods struggle with chest computed tomography (CT) scans across diverse DL architectures.

OBJECTIVE: This study proposes Random Pixel Swap (RPS), a novel DA technique, to enhance diagnostic performance in both convolutional neural networks and transformers for lung cancer diagnosis from CT scan images.

METHODS: RPS generates augmented data by randomly swapping pixels within patient CT scan images. We evaluated it on ResNet, MobileNet, Vision Transformer, and Swin Transformer models, using 2 public CT datasets (Iraq-Oncology Teaching Hospital/National Center for Cancer Diseases [IQ-OTH/NCCD] dataset and chest CT scan images dataset), and measured accuracy and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC). Statistical significance was assessed via paired t tests.

RESULTS: The RPS outperformed state-of-the-art DA methods (Cutout, Random Erasing, MixUp, and CutMix), achieving 97.56% accuracy and 98.61% AUROC on the IQ-OTH/NCCD dataset and 97.78% accuracy and 99.46% AUROC on the chest CT scan images dataset. While traditional augmentation approaches (flipping and rotation) remained effective, RPS complemented them, surpassing the performance findings in prior studies and demonstrating the potential of artificial intelligence for early lung cancer detection.

CONCLUSIONS: The RPS technique enhances convolutional neural network and transformer models, enabling more accurate automated lung cancer detection from CT scan images.

PMID:41342173 | DOI:10.2196/68848

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Estimating Antigen Test Sensitivity via Target Distribution Balancing: Development and Validation Study

JMIR Bioinform Biotechnol. 2025 Oct 20;6:e68476. doi: 10.2196/68476.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sensitivity-expressed as percent positive agreement (PPA) with a reference assay-is a primary metric for evaluating lateral-flow antigen tests (ATs), typically benchmarked against a quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). In SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics, ATs detect nucleocapsid protein, whereas qRT-PCR detects viral RNA copy numbers. Since observed PPA depends on the underlying viral load distribution (proxied by the number of cycle thresholds [Cts], which is inversely related to load), study-specific sampling can bias sensitivity estimates. Cohort differences-such as enrichment for high- or low-Ct specimens-therefore complicate cross-test comparisons, and real-world datasets often deviate from regulatory guidance to sample across the full concentration range. Although logistic models relating test positivity to Ct are well described, they are seldom used to reweight results to a standardized reference viral load distribution. As a result, reported sensitivities remain difficult to compare across studies, limiting both accuracy and generalizability.

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to develop and validate a statistical methodology that estimates the sensitivity of ATs by recalibrating clinical performance data-originally obtained from uncontrolled viral load distributions-against a standardized reference distribution of target concentrations, thereby enabling more accurate and comparable assessments of diagnostic test performance.

METHODS: AT sensitivity is estimated by modeling the PPA as a function of qRT-PCR Ct values (PPA function) using logistic regression on paired test results. Raw sensitivity is the proportion of AT positives among PCR-positive samples. Adjusted sensitivity is calculated by applying the PPA function to a reference Ct distribution, correcting for viral load variability. This enables standardized comparisons across tests. The method was validated using clinical data from a community study in Chelsea, Massachusetts, demonstrating its effectiveness in reducing sampling bias.

RESULTS: Over a 2-year period, paired ATs and qRT-PCR-positive samples were collected from 4 suppliers: A (n=211), B (n=156), C (n=85), and D (n=43). Ct value distributions varied substantially, with suppliers A and D showing lower Ct (high viral load) values in the samples, and supplier C skewed toward higher Ct values (low viral load). These differences led to inconsistent raw sensitivity estimates. To correct for this, we used logistic regression to model the PPA as a function of Cts and applied these models to a standardized reference Ct distribution. This adjustment reduced bias and enabled more accurate comparisons of test performance across suppliers.

CONCLUSIONS: We present a distribution-aware framework that models PPA as a logistic function of Ct and reweights results to a standardized reference Ct distribution to produce bias-corrected sensitivity estimates. This yields fairer, more consistent comparisons across AT suppliers and studies, strengthens quality control, and supports regulatory review. Collectively, our results provide a robust basis for recalibrating reported sensitivities and underscore the importance of distribution-aware evaluation in diagnostic test assessment.

PMID:41342172 | DOI:10.2196/68476

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Conversational Artificial Intelligence for Integrating Social Determinants, Genomics, and Clinical Data in Precision Medicine: Development and Implementation Study of the AI-HOPE-PM System

JMIR Bioinform Biotechnol. 2025 Oct 10;6:e76553. doi: 10.2196/76553.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Integrating clinical, genomic, and social determinants of health (SDOH) data is essential for advancing precision medicine and addressing cancer health disparities. However, existing bioinformatics tools often lack the flexibility to perform equity-driven analyses or require significant programming expertise.

OBJECTIVE: We developed AI-HOPE-PM (Artificial Intelligence Agent for High-Optimization and Precision Medicine in Population Metrics), a conversational artificial intelligence system designed to enable natural language-driven, multidimensional cancer analysis. This study describes the development, implementation, and application of AI-HOPE-PM to support hypothesis testing that integrates genomic, clinical, and SDOH data.

METHODS: AI-HOPE-PM leverages large language models and Python-based statistical scripts to convert user-defined natural language queries into executable workflows. It was evaluated using curated colorectal cancer datasets from The Cancer Genome Atlas and cBioPortal, enriched with harmonized SDOH variables. Accuracy of natural language interpretation, run time efficiency, and usability were benchmarked against cBioPortal and UCSC Xena.

RESULTS: AI-HOPE-PM successfully supported case-control stratification, survival modeling, and odds ratio analysis using natural language prompts. In colorectal cancer case studies, the system revealed significant disparities in progression-free survival and treatment access based on financial strain, health care access, food insecurity, and social support, demonstrating the importance of integrating SDOH in cancer research. Benchmark testing showed faster task execution compared to existing platforms, and the system achieved 92.5% accuracy in parsing biomedical queries.

CONCLUSIONS: AI-HOPE-PM lowers technical barriers to integrative cancer research by enabling real-time, user-friendly exploration of clinical, genomic, and SDOH data. It expands on prior work by incorporating equity metrics into precision oncology workflows and offers a scalable tool for supporting disparities-focused translational research. Five videos are included as multimedia appendices to demonstrate platform functionality in real-world scenarios.

PMID:41342165 | DOI:10.2196/76553

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Long term graft survival and rejection rate of zero-human leukocyte-antigen-mismatched deceased donor kidney transplant recipients: a retrospective multicentric cohort study

Kidney Res Clin Pract. 2025 Nov 17. doi: 10.23876/j.krcp.24.238. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Historically, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching has been a cornerstone of kidney transplantation (KT), with favorable outcomes. However, the survival benefit of KT with zero HLA mismatches appears to have decreased with the accumulation of transplantation experience and advancements in immunosuppressive therapies.

METHODS: This was a prospective observational cohort study based on data from the Korean Organ Transplantation Registry, including patients who underwent deceased donor KT from May 2014 to December 2022. A total of 3,350 KT patients were propensity score-matched at a 1:1 ratio and compared according to zero HLA mismatching (zero group) vs. non-zero HLA mismatching (non-zero group).

RESULTS: After matching, 276 patients in the zero group were compared to 276 patients in the non-zero group. Over a follow-up period of 38.4 ± 28.8 months, the use of immunosuppressants was similar between the two groups. Multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios of non-zero group vs. zero group were 1.63 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72-3.69; p = 0.24) for death censored graft failure, 1.62 (95% CI, 0.96-2.76; p = 0.07) for biopsy-proven rejection, 2.09 (95% CI, 0.87-5.00; p = 0.10) for death, 1.38 (95% CI, 1.02-1.86; p = 0.03) for posttransplant infection and 4.48 (95% CI, 1.52-13.25; p = 0.001) for antibody mediated rejection.

CONCLUSION: This study suggests that rigid adherence to HLA matching may be less critical than previously thought, particularly due to advancements in immunosuppressive therapies.

PMID:41342160 | DOI:10.23876/j.krcp.24.238

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Temporal trends in acute kidney injury-related mortality across 43 countries, 1996-2021, with projections up to 2050: a global time series analysis and modelling study

Kidney Res Clin Pract. 2025 Dec 4. doi: 10.23876/j.krcp.25.224. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a major global public health concern. However, a major challenge in addressing the AKI burden is the lack of global data on AKI-related mortality and its predictions, leaving significant limitations in understanding its trends over time. Therefore, we aimed to estimate AKI-related mortality rate trends and forecast future deaths.

METHODS: We evaluated the temporal trends in age-standardized AKI-related mortality from 1996 to 2021 across 43 countries using the World Health Organization Mortality Database, with future projections through to 2050. Temporal trends were assessed based on age-standardized mortality rates, and future projections up to 2050 were calculated using a predictive model that considered attributable risk factors from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021.

RESULTS: Age-standardized AKI-related mortality rate per 1,000,000 people remained stable from 1996 to 2021 (10.47 [95% confidence interval (CI), 8.84-12.11] to 9.94 [95% CI, 8.32-11.57]). Although age-standardized mortality rates were lower in high-income countries (HICs) compared to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), HICs exhibited a modest but statistically significant increasing trend (from 5.83 per 1,000,000 people [95% CI, 4.21-7.46] to 7.30 [95% CI, 5.66-8.95]), whereas LMICs showed a declining trend (from 19.66 [95% CI, 16.78-22.53] to 15.33 [95% CI, 12.37-18.29]). Projections indicate that mortality will rise to 11.36 per 1,000,000 population (95% CI, 10.65-12.07) by 2050, primarily attributable to population aging.

CONCLUSION: This global time-series modeling study highlights rising AKI-related mortality in HICs and/or aging populations. These findings underscore the need for targeted interventions to mitigate future AKI-related deaths.

PMID:41342156 | DOI:10.23876/j.krcp.25.224

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Comparative assessment of fusional vergences in adults with heterophoria using synoptophore and prism bar

Strabismus. 2025 Dec 4:1-9. doi: 10.1080/09273972.2025.2593528. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Purpose: The aim of the study was to compare the amplitudes of negative and positive fusional vergences in exophoria and esophoria using a synoptophore and prism bar. Methods: A prospective study was conducted from May to July 2024 among university students. In participants with mild to moderate heterophoria, horizontal fusional vergence amplitudes (blur, break and recovery points) were assessed for distance using prism bar and synoptophore. Consistent testing conditions and standardized procedures were maintained. Data were analyzed using SPSS v26 with the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. p values less than 0.05 were considered as statistically significant. To assess the level of difference between values from synoptophore and prism bar, descriptive statistics was used across heterophoria grades. Results: A total of 60 participants were divided into mild (<10 PD) and moderate (>10-20 PD) exophoria and esophoria groups (n = 15 each). The values obtained from synoptophore yielded consistently higher fusional vergences than prism bar. In mild exophoria, the synoptophore had small, but statistically significant higher negative fusional vergence break point (11.8 ± 1.15 PD) than the prism bar (10.53 ± 1.55 PD, p < .05), as with the positive fusional vergence break (17.27 ± 1.75 PD vs. 15.4 ± 1.71 PD, p < .05). In mild esophoria, the synoptophore had a greater positive fusional vergence break (23.33 ± 1.05 PD) compared to the prism bar (22.33 ± 1.05 PD, p < .05). For moderate deviations, higher values for blur, break and recovery points were seen with the values obtained from synoptophore in both positive and negative fusional vergence. Conclusion: The negative and positive fusional vergences were higher when measured with the synoptophore than the prism bar in both mild and moderate deviations, consistent with earlier research and reinforcing the need for further studies to establish clinical relevance.

PMID:41342148 | DOI:10.1080/09273972.2025.2593528

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Designing a Finite Element Model to Determine the Different Fixation Positions of Tracheal Catheters in the Oral Cavity for Minimizing the Risk of Oral Mucosal Pressure Injury: Comparison Study

JMIR Bioinform Biotechnol. 2025 Jul 11;6:e69298. doi: 10.2196/69298.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite being an important life-saving medical device to ensure smooth breathing in critically ill patients, the tracheal tube causes damage to the oral mucosa of patients during use, which increases not only the pain but also the risk of infection.

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to establish finite element models for different fixation positions of tracheal catheters in the oral cavity to identify the optimal fixation position that minimizes the risk of oral mucosal pressure injury.

METHODS: Computed tomography data of the head and face from healthy male subjects were selected, and a 3D finite element model was created using Mimics 21 and Geomagic Wrap 2021 software. A pressure sensor was used to measure the actual pressure exerted by the oral soft tissue on the upper and lower lips, as well as the left and right mouth corners of the tracheal catheter. The generated model was imported into Ansys Workbench 22.0 software, where all materials were assigned appropriate values, and boundary conditions were established. Vertical loads of 2.6 N and 3.43 N were applied to the upper and lower lips, while horizontal loads of 1.76 N and 1.82 N were applied to the left and right corners of the mouth, respectively, to observe the stress distribution characteristics of the skin, mucosa, and muscle tissue in four fixation areas.

RESULTS: The mean (SD) equivalent stress and shear stress of the skin and mucosal tissues were the lowest in the left mouth corner (28.42 [0.65] kPa and 6.58 [0.16] kPa, respectively) and progressively increased in the right mouth corner (30.72 [0.98] kPa and 7.05 [0.32] kPa, respectively), upper lip (35.20 [0.99] kPa and 7.70 [0.17] kPa, respectively), and lower lip (41.79 [0.48] kPa and 10.02 [0.44] kPa, respectively; P<.001 for both stresses). The equivalent stress and shear stress of the muscle tissue were the lowest in the right mouth angle (34.35 [0.52] kPa and 5.69 [0.29] kPa, respectively) and progressively increased in the left mouth corner (35.64 [1.18] kPa and 5.74 [0.30] kPa, respectively), upper lip (43.17 [0.58] kPa and 8.91 [0.55] kPa, respectively), and lower lip (43.17 [0.58] kPa and 11.96 [0.50] kPa, respectively; P<.001 for both stresses). The equivalent stress and shear stress of muscle tissues were significantly greater than those of skin and mucosal tissues in the four fixed positions, and the difference was statistically significant (P<.05).

CONCLUSIONS: Fixation of the tracheal catheter at the left and right oral corners results in the lowest equivalent and shear stresses, while the lower lip exhibited the highest stresses. We recommend minimizing the contact time and area of the lower lip during tracheal catheter fixation, and to alternately replace the contact area at the left and right oral corners to prevent oral mucosal pressure injuries.

PMID:41342147 | DOI:10.2196/69298

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In vitro exebacase (CF-301) activity against methicillin-susceptible or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci strains isolated from patients with infective endocarditis

J Antimicrob Chemother. 2025 Dec 4:dkaf435. doi: 10.1093/jac/dkaf435. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis (IE) is a severe infection mainly caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecalis and viridans streptococci. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS), especially methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis (MRSE), are major pathogens in prosthetic valves and devices. Exebacase is a first-in-class, antistaphylococcal lysin with rapid bactericidal and antibiofilm activity.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the in vitro activity of exebacase and standard IE antibiotics against S. aureus and CoNS isolates from IE patients in a university hospital (2010-2020).

METHODS: A total of 211 consecutive strains were analysed: S. aureus [n = 103 (82 MSSA, 21 MRSA)], S. epidermidis [n = 76 (20 MSSE, 56 MRSE)] and other CoNS species (n = 32, Staphylococcus haemolyticus, Staphylococcus lugdunensis, Staphylococcus hominis, Staphylococcus capitis, Staphylococcus schleiferi, Staphylococcus caprae, Staphylococcus pasteuri). Broth microdilution MICs were determined for exebacase and comparators (cloxacillin, ceftaroline, vancomycin, daptomycin, gentamicin, rifampicin).

RESULTS: Exebacase inhibited all S. aureus at ≤1 mg/L. Geometric mean (GM) MICs were 0.56 mg/L for MSSA and 0.49 mg/L for MRSA, with MIC50/90 of 0.5/1 mg/L. For S. epidermidis, GM MICs were 3.03 mg/L (MSSE) and 3.40 mg/L (MRSE), with MIC50/90 of 4/16 and 4/8 mg/L, respectively. Other CoNS showed GM MICs ranging from 0.49 mg/L (S. capitis) to 2.59 mg/L (S. lugdunensis), with intermediate values for S. haemolyticus (1.15), S. hominis (1.0) and S. schleiferi (0.79). Exebacase activity was comparable to β-lactams, vancomycin and daptomycin and remained unaffected by resistance.

CONCLUSIONS: Exebacase activity was independent of methicillin resistance and consistently higher against S. aureus than S. epidermidis. Further research is warranted to explore lysins in combination against staphylococcal infections.

PMID:41342135 | DOI:10.1093/jac/dkaf435

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Prescription of Monoclonal Antibodies Against Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide for the Prophylaxis of Migraine in Austria: A Retrospective, Longitudinal Analysis of Nationwide Insurance Data

Eur J Neurol. 2025 Dec;32(12):e70440. doi: 10.1111/ene.70440.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Insurance data allow insights into dispensations of medications. This retrospective study over 49 months examined dispensations of monoclonal antibodies against calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP-mAbs).

METHODS: Using nationwide insurance data, we examined dispensations of erenumab, fremanezumab, or galcanezumab from September 1, 2018 to September 30, 2022. We examined the duration of treatment and breaks (Kaplan-Meier curves, medians, quartiles), persistence (proportion of days covered), and switches, acute medications, and other preventatives.

RESULTS: Of 8.8 million persons, 8934 were at least once dispensed a CGRP-mAb (83.5% women, median age 45 years). Median individual follow-up time was 710 days, median duration of treatment with any CGRP-mAb was 297 days, 42.9% had CGRP-mAbs for at least 1 year. Median duration of treatment with the first-ever CGRP-mAb was 327 days; 63.4% experienced a therapy break. Within 1 year after stopping, 53.5% resumed the same CGRP-mAb, 16.9% another CGRP-mAb, 29.6% did not resume any CGRP-mAb; 13.7% started a second CGRP-mAb and 1.7% a third. 22% definitively stopped therapy within their follow-up. Dispensation of triptans decreased during and after therapy with CGRP-mAbs; dispensation of other acute prescription medications was low without change. 11.4% had other preventatives before and 2.4% during CGRP-mAb therapy. The proportion of days covered was 96%.

CONCLUSIONS: In this nationwide study persistence with CGRP-mAbs was excellent; dispensations of triptans and other preventatives decreased during CGRP-mAb therapy. Therapy breaks were common, but the majority resumed CGRP-mAbs, which indicates the need for long-term prophylaxis.

PMID:41342133 | DOI:10.1111/ene.70440