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Health Physics Oct 2023Organ dosimetry data of the atomic bomb survivors and the resulting cancer risk models derived from these data are currently assessed within the DS02 dosimetry system...
Fetal and Maternal Atomic Bomb Survivor Dosimetry Using the J45 Pregnant Female Phantom Series: Considerations of the Kneeling and Lying Posture with Comparisons to the DS02 System.
Organ dosimetry data of the atomic bomb survivors and the resulting cancer risk models derived from these data are currently assessed within the DS02 dosimetry system developed through the Joint US-Japan Dosimetry Working Group. In DS02, the anatomical survivor models are limited to three hermaphroditic stylized phantoms-an adult (55 kg), a child (19.8 kg), and an infant (9.7 kg)-that were originally designed for the preceding DS86 dosimetry system. As such, organ doses needed for assessment of in-utero cancer risks to the fetus have continued to rely upon the use of the uterine wall in the adult non-pregnant stylized phantom as the dose surrogate for all fetal organs regardless of gestational age. To address these limitations, the Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF) Working Group on Organ Dose (WGOD) has established the J45 (Japan 1945) series of high-resolution voxel phantoms, which were derived from the UF/NCI series of hybrid phantoms and scaled to match mid-1940s Japanese body morphometries. The series includes male and female phantoms-newborn to adult-and four pregnant female phantoms at gestational ages of 8, 15, 25, and 38 wk post-conception. In previous studies, we have reported organ dose differences between those reported by the DS02 system and those computed by the WGOD using 3D Monte Carlo radiation transport simulations of atomic bomb gamma-ray and neutron fields for the J45 phantoms series in their traditional "standing" posture, with some variations in their facing direction relative to the bomb hypocenter. In this present study, we present the J45 pregnant female phantoms in both a "kneeling" and "lying" posture and assess the dosimetric impact of these more anatomically realistic survivor models in comparison to current organ doses given by the DS02 system. For the kneeling phantoms facing the bomb hypocenter, organ doses from bomb source photon spectra were shown to be overestimated by the DS02 system by up to a factor of 1.45 for certain fetal organs and up to a factor of 1.17 for maternal organs. For lying phantoms with their feet in the direction of the hypocenter, fetal organ doses from bomb source photon spectra were underestimated by the DS02 system by factors as low as 0.77, while maternal organ doses were overestimated by up to a factor of 1.38. Organs doses from neutron contributions to the radiation fields exhibited an increasing overestimation by the DS02 stylized phantoms as gestational age increased. These discrepancies are most evident in fetal organs that are more posterior within the mother's womb, such as the fetal brain. Further analysis revealed that comparison of these postures to the original standing posture indicate significant dose differences for both maternal and fetal organ doses depending on the type of irradiation. Results from this study highlight the degree to which the existing DS02 system can differ from organ dosimetry based upon 3D radiation transport simulations using more anatomically realistic models of those survivors exposed during pregnancy.
Topics: Infant, Newborn; Child; Adult; Pregnancy; Humans; Male; Female; Atomic Bomb Survivors; Radiometry; Radiation Injuries; Fetus; Posture
PubMed: 37358430
DOI: 10.1097/HP.0000000000001710 -
Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare... Jan 2024A number of countries and states prohibit surrogacy except in cases of "medical necessity" or for those with specific medical conditions. Healthcare providers in some...
A number of countries and states prohibit surrogacy except in cases of "medical necessity" or for those with specific medical conditions. Healthcare providers in some countries have similar policies restricting the provision of clinical assistance in surrogacy. This paper argues that surrogacy is never medically necessary in any ordinary understanding of this term. The author aims to show first that surrogacy per se is a socio-legal intervention and not a medical one and, second, that the intervention in question does not treat, prevent, or mitigate any actual or potential harm to health. Legal regulations and healthcare-provider policies of this kind therefore codify a fiction-one which both obscures the socio-legal motivations for surrogacy and inhibits critical examination of those motivations while mobilizing normative connotations of appeals to medical need. The persisting distinction, in law and in moral discourse, between "social" and "medical" surrogacy, is unjustified.
Topics: Female; Pregnancy; Humans; Surrogate Mothers; Morals
PubMed: 37170395
DOI: 10.1017/S0963180123000269 -
Medical Anthropology Jul 2023Until early 2022, within the global fertility industry, Ukraine was one of the most important destinations for reproductive travel worldwide, particularly specializing...
Until early 2022, within the global fertility industry, Ukraine was one of the most important destinations for reproductive travel worldwide, particularly specializing in gestational surrogacy for international intended parents. Already weakened by the COVID-19 pandemic and related restrictions, the surrogacy market, and here especially surrogates and intended parents, was strongly affected by the Russian invasion in February 2022. In this article, I discuss and analyze the reproductive entanglements of surrogates, intended parents, and the children born through such transnational surrogacy arrangements in Ukraine and how this extreme crisis of war exposed and exacerbated existing vulnerabilities.
Topics: Pregnancy; Female; Child; Humans; Surrogate Mothers; Ukraine; Pandemics; Anthropology, Medical; COVID-19
PubMed: 37093888
DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2023.2201682 -
Clinical Chemistry Jul 2023Large β-globin gene cluster deletions (hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin [Hb] or β-, δβ-, γδβ-, and ϵγδβ-thalassemia), are associated with widely...
BACKGROUND
Large β-globin gene cluster deletions (hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin [Hb] or β-, δβ-, γδβ-, and ϵγδβ-thalassemia), are associated with widely disparate phenotypes, including variable degrees of microcytic anemia and Hb F levels. When present, increased Hb A2 is used as a surrogate marker for β-thalassemia. Notably, ϵγδβ-thalassemias lack the essential regulatory locus control region (LCR) and cause severe transient perinatal anemia but normal newborn screen (NBS) results and Hb A2 levels. Herein, we report a novel deletion of the ϵ, Aγ, Gγ, and ψβ loci with intact LCR, δ-, and β-regions in 2 women and newborn twins.
METHODS
Capillary electrophoresis (CE), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), DNA sequencing, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), gap-polymerase chain reaction (gap-PCR), and long-read sequencing (LRS) were performed.
RESULTS
NBS showed an Hb A > Hb F pattern for both twins. At 20 months, Hb A2 was increased similarly to that in the mother and an unrelated woman. Unexplained microcytosis was absent and the twins lacked severe neonatal anemia. MLPA, LRS, and gap-PCR confirmed a 32 599 base pair deletion of ϵ (HBE1) through ψβ (HBBP1) loci.
CONCLUSIONS
This deletion represents a hemoglobinopathy category with a distinct phenotype that has not been previously described, an ϵγ-thalassemia. Both the NBS Hb A > F pattern and the subsequent increased Hb A2 without microcytosis are unusual. A similar deletion should be considered when this pattern is encountered and appropriate test methods selected for detection. Knowledge of the clinical impact of this new category will improve genetic counselling, with distinction from the severe transient anemia associated with ϵγδβ-thalassemia.
Topics: Humans; Female; Thalassemia; Hemoglobinopathies; beta-Thalassemia; Fetal Hemoglobin; Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
PubMed: 37086467
DOI: 10.1093/clinchem/hvad038 -
Bioscience Trends Sep 2023China's birth rates hit a record low in 2021. The high demand for having children has spawned a massive market for surrogacy, which, however, is a dilemma in China...
China's birth rates hit a record low in 2021. The high demand for having children has spawned a massive market for surrogacy, which, however, is a dilemma in China involving a series of moral and legal issues under the current circumstances. First, special populations, including infertile patients, families who have lost their sole child, and homosexuals, wanted to have children, giving rise to surrogacy. Then, the development of and innovation in assisted reproductive technology allowed surrogacy to mature. A high return offsets a high risk, and consequently, an underground surrogacy market has emerged, causing various social issues for the Chinese Government, such as civil disputes, gender disproportion, crime, and the spread of disease. At the same time, surrogacy violates moral ethics, traditional Chinese culture, and the rights and interests of vulnerable groups.
Topics: Female; Child; Pregnancy; Humans; Surrogate Mothers; Reproductive Techniques, Assisted; China
PubMed: 37081669
DOI: 10.5582/bst.2022.01263 -
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology Oct 2023The current requirement for biomarkers to detect hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is polarized. One is a fully-automated and highly sensitive measurement system; the... (Review)
Review
The current requirement for biomarkers to detect hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is polarized. One is a fully-automated and highly sensitive measurement system; the other is a simple system for point-of-care testing (POCT) in resource-limited areas. Hepatitis B core-related antigen (HBcrAg) reflects intrahepatic covalently closed circular DNA and serum HBV DNA. Even in patients with undetectable serum HBV DNA or HBsAg loss, HBcrAg may remain detectable. Decreased HBcrAg levels are associated with reduction of the occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in chronic hepatitis B. Recently, a fully-automated, novel high-sensitivity HBcrAg assay (iTACT-HBcrAg, cut-off value: 2.1 logIU/mL) has been developed. This attractive assay has been released in Japan very recently. iTACT-HBcrAg can be useful for monitoring HBV reactivation and prediction of HCC occurrence, as an alternative to HBV DNA. Moreover, monitoring HBcrAg may be suitable for determining the therapeutic effectiveness of approved drugs and novel drugs under development. Presently, international guidelines recommend anti-HBV prophylaxis for pregnant women with high viral loads to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HBV. However, >95% of HBV-infected individuals live in countries where HBV DNA quantification is not available. Worldwide elimination of HBV needs the scaling-up of examination and medication services in resource-limited areas. Based on this situation, a rapid and easy HBcrAg assay as a POCT is valuable. This review provides the latest information regarding the clinical use of a new surrogate marker, HBcrAg, in HBV management, based on iTACT-HBcrAg or POCT, and introduces novel agents targeting HBV RNA/protein.
Topics: Pregnancy; Female; Humans; Hepatitis B virus; Hepatitis B Core Antigens; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; DNA, Viral; Liver Neoplasms; Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical; Hepatitis B, Chronic; Hepatitis B; Biomarkers; Hepatitis B Surface Antigens
PubMed: 36891607
DOI: 10.3350/cmh.2022.0434