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Toxicology Jun 2024Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a rat renal carcinogen that induces karyomegaly and micronuclei in proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTECs). We previously performed comprehensive...
Involvement of multiple epigenetic mechanisms by altered DNA methylation from the early stage of renal carcinogenesis before proliferative lesion formation upon repeated administration of ochratoxin A.
Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a rat renal carcinogen that induces karyomegaly and micronuclei in proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTECs). We previously performed comprehensive gene profiling of alterations in promoter-region methylation and gene expression in PTECs of rats treated with OTA for 13 weeks. The OTA-specific gene profile was obtained by excluding genes showing expression changes similar to those upon treatment with 3-chloro-1,2-propanediol, a renal carcinogen not inducing karyomegaly. In this study, we validated the candidate genes using methylated DNA enrichment PCR and real-time RT-PCR, and identified Gen1, Anxa3, Cdkn1a, and Osm as genes showing OTA-specific epigenetic changes. These genes and related molecules were subjected to gene expression and immunohistochemical analyses in the PTECs of rats treated with OTA, other renal carcinogens, or non-carcinogenic renal toxicants for 4 or 13 weeks. Cdkn1a upregulation and increase of p21 karyomegalic PTECs were observed with OTA, matching the findings associated with micronucleus-inducing carcinogens. This suggested that the increase of p21 karyomegalic PTECs is linked to micronucleus formation, which in turn accelerates chromosomal instability. The upregulation of Cdkn1a-related genes with OTA suggests the acquisition of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype, which promotes the establishment of a carcinogenic environment. Meanwhile, OTA specifically caused a decrease of GEN1 PTECs reflecting Gen1 downregulation and an increase of ANXA3 PTECs reflecting Anxa3 upregulation, as well as Osm upregulation. OTA may efficiently disrupt pathways for repairing the DNA double-strand breaks that it itself causes, via Gen1 downregulation, and enhance cell proliferation through the upregulation of Anxa3 and Osm. This may exacerbate the chromosomal instability from the early stage of OTA-induced renal carcinogenesis before proliferative lesions form. OTA may cause renal carcinogenesis involving multiple epigenetic mechanisms.
PubMed: 38945198
DOI: 10.1016/j.tox.2024.153875 -
Journal of the American Medical... Jun 2024Loneliness and social isolation are associated with adverse health outcomes, especially within the elderly population, underlining the need for effective interventions.... (Review)
Review
OBJECTIVES
Loneliness and social isolation are associated with adverse health outcomes, especially within the elderly population, underlining the need for effective interventions. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to summarize all available evidence regarding the effectiveness of interventions for loneliness and social isolation, to map out their working mechanisms, and to give implications for policy and practice.
DESIGN
Systematic literature review and meta-analysis.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS
Older adults (≥65 years).
METHODS
A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and CINAHL for studies quantitively or qualitatively assessing effects of interventions for loneliness and social isolation in older adults, following predefined selection criteria. Risk of bias as well as small study effects were assessed and, wherever appropriate, information about effect sizes of individual studies pooled using random-effects meta-analyses. Sources for between-study heterogeneity were explored using meta-regression.
RESULTS
Of n = 2223 identified articles, n = 67 were eventually included for narrative synthesis. Significant intervention effects were reported for a proportion of studies (55.9% and 50.0% for loneliness and social isolation, respectively) and 57.6% of studies including a follow-up measure (n = 29) reported sustained intervention effects. Meta-analysis of n = 27 studies, representing n = 1756 participants, suggested a medium overall effect of loneliness interventions (d = -0.47; 95% CI, -0.62 to -0.32). Between-study heterogeneity was substantial and could not be explained by differences in study design, year of publication, outcome measures, intervention length, participant demographics, setting, baseline level of loneliness, or geographic location. However, non-technology-based interventions reported larger effect sizes on average (Δd = -0.35; 95% CI, -0.66 to -0.04; P = .029) and were more often significant. Qualitative assessment of potential intervention mechanisms resulted in 3 clusters of effective components: "promoting social contact," "transferring knowledge and skills," and "addressing social cognition".
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
Interventions for loneliness and social isolation can generally be effective, although some unexplained between-study heterogeneity remains. Further research is needed regarding the applicability of interventions across different settings and countries, also considering their cost-effectiveness.
PubMed: 38945174
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2024.105110 -
Journal of the American Medical... Jun 2024Although the cardiac benefits of maintaining a lifelong exercise routine are undisputed, to what extent late-in-life exercise training can ameliorate cardiac aging...
OBJECTIVE
Although the cardiac benefits of maintaining a lifelong exercise routine are undisputed, to what extent late-in-life exercise training can ameliorate cardiac aging remains unclear. We examined the impact of a 12-month exercise training program on cardiac reserve, static cardiac structure, and cardiac function in older adults.
DESIGN
This study was a single-center, randomized trial using Zelen design. Participants in the center-based exercise (CBE) group underwent an individualized multicomponent exercise training program.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS
In total, 120 community-dwelling older adults aged 65-85 years were evenly divided into a CBE group and a control group.
METHODS
The primary outcome indicator was absolute change in peak oxygen uptake (peakVO) per kilogram from baseline to 12 months. The secondary outcome indicators were the absolute changes in other cardiopulmonary exercise test indices and cardiac magnetic resonance parameters. This study has been registered at the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry Network (ChiCTR XXXX).
RESULTS
In total, 47 older adults in the control group and 49 in the CBE group ultimately completed the 12-month follow-up and were analyzed. Of all participants, 52 (46.4%) were men, and the mean age was 71.22 ± 4.55 years. The absolute change in peakVO/kg was significantly different between the CBE and control groups by +3.32 mL/kg/min (95% CI 2.10-4.53; P < .001), and a sex-related difference was observed. Additionally, the right ventricular peak filling and ejection rate improved to a greater degree in the CBE than control group (+65.57 mL/s, P = .006; +56.39 mL/s, P = .026, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
A 12-month exercise training program started later in life was effective in improving cardiopulmonary reserve, and men showed a better response to training than women. The right ventricular function increased after late-in-life exercise training.
PubMed: 38945172
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2024.105117 -
Journal of Movement Disorders Jun 2024
Potential Psychosis Induced by Sustained High Plasma Levodopa Concentration via Continuous Subcutaneous Foslevodopa/Foscarbidopa Infusion in Parkinson's Disease: A Case Report.
PubMed: 38945151
DOI: 10.14802/jmd.24114 -
The Lancet. Neurology Jun 2024The accuracy of prognostication in patients with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) needs to be improved. We aimed to explore the prognostic value of preserved spinal...
BACKGROUND
The accuracy of prognostication in patients with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) needs to be improved. We aimed to explore the prognostic value of preserved spinal tissue bridges-injury-spared neural tissue adjacent to the lesion-for prediction of sensorimotor recovery in a large, multicentre cohort of people with SCI.
METHODS
For this longitudinal study, we included patients with acute cervical SCI (vertebrae C1-C7) admitted to one of three trauma or rehabilitation centres: Murnau, Germany (March 18, 2010-March 1, 2021); Zurich, Switzerland (May 12, 2002-March 2, 2019); and Denver, CO, USA (Jan 12, 2010-Feb 16, 2017). Patients were clinically assessed at admission (baseline), at discharge (3 months), and at 12 months post SCI. Midsagittal tissue bridges were quantified from T2-weighted images assessed at 3-4 weeks post SCI. Fractional regression and unbiased recursive partitioning models, adjusted for age, sex, centre, and neurological level of injury, were used to assess associations between tissue bridge width and baseline-adjusted total motor score, pinprick score, and light touch scores at 3 months and 12 months. Patients were stratified into subgroups according to whether they showed better or worse predicted recovery.
FINDINGS
The cohort included 227 patients: 93 patients from Murnau (22 [24%] female); 43 patients from Zurich (four [9%] female); and 91 patients from Denver (14 [15%] female). 136 of these participants (from Murnau and Zurich) were followed up for up to 12 months. At 3 months, per preserved 1 mm of tissue bridge at baseline, patients recovered a mean of 9·3% (SD 0·9) of maximal total motor score (95% CI 7·5-11.2), 8·6% (0·8) of maximal pinprick score (7·0-10·1), and 10·9% (0·8) of maximal light touch score (9·4-12·5). At 12 months post SCI, per preserved 1 mm of tissue bridge at baseline, patients recovered a mean of 10·9% (1·3) of maximal total motor score (8·4-13·4), 5·7% (1·3) of maximal pinprick score (3·3-8·2), and 6·9% (1·4) of maximal light touch score (4·1-9·7). Partitioning models identified a tissue bridge cutoff width of 2·0 mm to be indicative of higher or lower 3-month total motor, pinprick, and light touch scores, and a cutoff of 4·0 mm to be indicative of higher and lower 12-month scores. Compared with models that contained clinical predictors only, models additionally including tissue bridges had significantly improved prediction accuracy across all three centres.
INTERPRETATION
Tissue bridges, measured in the first few weeks after SCI, are associated with short-term and long-term clinical improvement. Thus, tissue bridges could potentially be used to guide rehabilitation decision making and to stratify patients into more homogeneous subgroups of recovery in regenerative and neuroprotective clinical trials.
FUNDING
Wings for Life, International Foundation for Research in Paraplegia, EU project Horizon 2020 (NISCI grant), and ERA-NET NEURON.
PubMed: 38945142
DOI: 10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00173-X -
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity Jul 2024Little is known about ageing and frailty progression in low-income settings. We aimed to describe frailty changes over time in individuals living in rural Burkina Faso...
BACKGROUND
Little is known about ageing and frailty progression in low-income settings. We aimed to describe frailty changes over time in individuals living in rural Burkina Faso and to assess which sociodemographic, disability, and multimorbidity factors are associated with frailty progression and mortality.
METHODS
This longitudinal, population-based study was conducted at the Nouna Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) site in northwestern Burkina Faso. Eligible participants were aged 40 years or older and had been primarily resident in a household within the HDSS area for at least the past 6 months before the baseline survey and were selected from the 2015 HDSS household census using a stratified random sample of adults living in unique households within the area. Participants were interviewed in their homes in 2018 (baseline), 2021 (follow-up), or both. We derived the Fried frailty score for each participant at each timepoint using data on grip strength, gait speed, self-reported weight loss, self-reported exhaustion, and physical activity, and described changes in frailty status (no frailty, pre-frailty, or frailty) between 2018 and 2021. We used multivariate regression models to assess factors (ie, sex, age, marital status, educational attainment, wealth quintile, WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS) score, and multimorbidity) associated with frailty progression (either worsening frailty status or dying, compared with frailty status remaining the same or improving) and with mortality, and developed sequential models: unadjusted, adjusting for sociodemographic factors (sex, age, marital status, educational attainment, and wealth quintile), and adjusting for sociodemographic factors, disability, and multimorbidity.
FINDINGS
Between May 25 and July 19, 2018, and between July 1 and Aug 22, 2021, 5952 individuals were invited to participate: 1709 (28·7%) did not consent, 1054 (17·8%) participated in 2018 only and were lost to follow-up, 1214 (20·4%) participated in 2021 only, and 1975 (33·2%) were included in both years or died between years. Of 1967 participants followed up with complete demographic data, 190 (9·7%) were frail or unable to complete the frailty assessment in 2018, compared with 77 (3·9%) in 2021. Between 2018 and 2021, frailty status improved in 567 (28·8%) participants and worsened in 327 (16·6%), and 101 (5·1%) participants died. The relative risk of frailty status worsening or of dying (compared with frailty impRoving or no change) increased with age and WHODAS score, whereas female sex appeared protective. After controlling for all sociodemographic factors, multimorbidity, and WHODAS score, odds of mortality were 1·07 (odds ratio 2·07, 95% CI 1·05-4·09) times higher among pre-frail individuals and 1·1 (2·21, 0·90-5·41) times higher among frail individuals than among non-frail individuals.
INTERPRETATION
Frailty status was highly dynamic in this low-income setting and appears to be modifiable. Given the rapid increase in the numbers of older adults in low-income or middle-income countries, understanding the behaviour of frailty in these settings is of high importance for the development of policies and health systems to ensure the maintenance of health and wellbeing in ageing populations. Future work should focus on designing context-appropriate interventions to improve frailty status.
FUNDING
Alexander Von Humboldt Foundation, Institute for Global Innovation, University of Birmingham, and Wellcome Trust.
Topics: Humans; Male; Female; Longitudinal Studies; Aged; Middle Aged; Frailty; Burkina Faso; Rural Population; Adult; Disease Progression; Aged, 80 and over; Frail Elderly
PubMed: 38945131
DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00096-5 -
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity Jul 2024Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, exhibiting an upward trend in prevalence. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of Parkinson's... (Meta-Analysis)
Meta-Analysis
BACKGROUND
Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, exhibiting an upward trend in prevalence. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of Parkinson's disease, temporal trends between 1980 and 2023, and variations in prevalence by location, age, sex, survey period, sociodemographic index (SDI), human development index (HDI), and study characteristics (sample size, diagnostic criteria, and data source).
METHODS
In this systematic review and meta-analysis we searched PubMed, Cochrane, Web of Science, Embase, Scopus, and Global Health for observational studies that reported Parkinson's disease prevalence in the general population from database inception to Nov 1, 2023. We included studies if they were original observational investigations, had participants from the general population or community-based datasets, and provided numerical data on the prevalence of Parkinson's disease either with 95% CIs or with sufficient information to calculate 95% CIs. Studies were excluded if they were conducted in a specific population, had a sample size smaller than 1000, or were review articles, case reports, protocols, meeting abstracts, letters, comments, short communications, posters, and reports. The publication characteristics (first author and publication year), study location (countries, WHO regions, SDI, and HDI), survey period, study design, diagnostic criteria, data source, participant information, and prevalence data were extracted from articles using a standard form. Two authors independently evaluated eligibility, and discrepancies were resolved through discussion with the third author. We used random effect models to pool estimates with 95% CIs. Estimated annual percentage change (EAPC) was calculated to assess the temporal trend in prevalence of Parkinson's disease. The study was registered with PROSPERO, CRD42022364417.
FINDINGS
83 studies from 37 countries were eligible for analysis, with 56 studies providing all-age prevalence, 53 studies reporting age-specific prevalence, and 26 studies providing both all-age and age-specific prevalence. Global pooled prevalence of Parkinson's disease was 1·51 cases per 1000 (95% CI 1·19-1·88), which was higher in males (1·54 cases per 1000 [1·17-1·96]) than in females (1·49 cases per 1000 [1·12-1·92], p=0·030). During different survey periods, the prevalence of Parkinson's disease was 0·90 cases per 1000 (0·48-1·44; 1980-89), 1·38 cases per 1000 (1·17-1·61; 1990-99), 1·18 cases per 1000 (0·77-1·67; 2000-09), and 3·81 cases per 1000 (2·67-5·14; 2010-23). The EAPC of Parkinson's disease prevalence was significantly higher in the period of 2004-23 (EAPC 16·32% [95% CI 6·07-26·58], p=0·0040) than in the period of 1980-2003 (5·30% [0·82-9·79], p=0·022). Statistically significant disparities in prevalence were observed across six WHO regions. Prevalence increased with HDI or SDI. Considerable variations were observed in the pooled prevalence of Parkinson's disease based on different sample sizes or diagnostic criteria. Prevalence also increased with age, reaching 9·34 cases per 1000 (7·26-11·67) among individuals older than 60 years.
INTERPRETATION
The global prevalence of Parkinson's disease has been increasing since the 1980s, with a more pronounced rise in the past two decades. The prevalence of Parkinson's disease is higher in countries with higher HDI or SDI. It is necessary to conduct more high-quality epidemiological studies on Parkinson's disease, especially in low SDI countries.
FUNDING
National Nature Science Foundation of China.
TRANSLATION
For the Chinese translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
Topics: Parkinson Disease; Humans; Prevalence; Female; Male; Global Health
PubMed: 38945129
DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00094-1 -
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity Jul 2024Ageing hallmarks, characterising features of cellular ageing, have a role in the pathophysiology of many age-related diseases. We examined whether obesity is associated...
BACKGROUND
Ageing hallmarks, characterising features of cellular ageing, have a role in the pathophysiology of many age-related diseases. We examined whether obesity is associated with an increased risk of developing such hallmark-related diseases.
METHODS
In this multicohort study, we included people aged 38-72 years with data on weight, height, and waist circumference measured during a clinical examination at baseline between March 13, 2006, and Oct 1, 2010, from the UK Biobank with follow-up until Nov 12, 2021. To test reproducibility of the findings (replication analysis), we used data from people aged 40 years or older included in the Finnish Public Sector study and the Finnish Health and Social Support study who responded to the study surveys, had data on BMI, and were successfully linked to electronic health records from national registers up to Dec 31, 2016. Obesity and clinical characteristics were assessed at baseline. Via linkage to national health records, participants were followed up for 83 diseases related to nine ageing hallmarks (genomic instability, telomere attrition, epigenetic alterations, loss of proteostasis, deregulated nutrient sensing, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence, stem cell exhaustion, and altered intercellular communication). Outcomes were the first instance of hallmark-related disease, in addition to co-occurrence of three or more hallmark-related diseases and mortality.
FINDINGS
496 530 adults (mean age 57·0 years [SD 8·1]) from the UK Biobank were included in the primary analysis, and 83 249 (mean age 48·2 years [6·4]) adults from the Finnish cohorts were included in the replication analysis. Median follow-up was 12·7 years (IQR 12·0-13·4) in the UK Biobank and 14·0 years (8·0-15·0) in the Finnish cohorts. After adjusting for demographic characteristics, lifestyle factors, and depression, UK Biobank participants with obesity (BMI ≥30·0 kg/m) had a 1·40 (95% CI 1·38-1·41) times higher hazard ratio for the first hallmark-related disease than those with a healthy weight (BMI 18·5-24·9 kg/m). The corresponding hazard ratios for three co-occurring diseases were 2·92 (95% CI 2·64-3·22) for deregulated nutrient sensing, 2·73 (2·46-3·02) for telomere attrition, 2·33 (2·10-2·60) for epigenetic alterations, 2·30 (2·14-2·48) for mitochondrial dysfunction, 2·23 (2·04-2·45) for stem cell exhaustion, 2·02 (1·89-2·16) for altered intercellular communication, 2·01 (1·89-2·15) for cellular senescence, 1·83 (1·67-2·00) for loss of proteostasis, and 1·39 (1·27-1·52) for genomic instability. These findings were replicated in the Finnish cohorts. In both studies, the associations between other risk factors (low education, unhealthy dietary factors [available only in the UK Biobank], smoking, high alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, and depression) and hallmark-related diseases were weaker than those with obesity. 45-60% of the excess mortality in people with obesity was attributable to hallmark-related diseases.
INTERPRETATION
Obesity might have an important role in the development of diseases associated with cellular ageing. Tackling ageing mechanisms could potentially help to reduce the disease and mortality burden resulting from the obesity epidemic.
FUNDING
Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, US National Institute on Aging, Academy of Finland, and Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research.
TRANSLATIONS
For the German and Finnish translations of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
Topics: Humans; Obesity; Middle Aged; Male; Female; Aged; Adult; Cellular Senescence; Finland; Cohort Studies; Risk Factors; Aging; United Kingdom; Body Mass Index
PubMed: 38945128
DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00087-4 -
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity Jul 2024
Topics: Humans; Geriatrics; United States; Societies, Medical; Aged
PubMed: 38945127
DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00113-2 -
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity Jul 2024
Topics: Humans; Aging
PubMed: 38945126
DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00111-9