Saturday, February 01, 2025

 

240-year-old drug could save UK National Health Service £100 million a year treating common heart rhythm disorder



Health economic analysis shows digoxin leads to fewer adverse events which could free up hospital beds


AKA  DIGITALIS / FOXGLOVE


University of Birmingham





A 240-year-old drug called digoxin could save the National Health Service (NHS) at least £100 million each year when treating older patients with atrial fibrillation and heart failure.  This was compared to usual treatment with a beta-blocker according to a new study from the University of Birmingham, the city where digoxin was first used in 1785.

 

In a paper published in the journal Heart, researchers conducted an economic analysis on a clinical trial called RATE-AF to look at the differences between two widely used drugs for older patients with a common heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation (AF) and symptoms of heart failure.

 

The RATE-AF trial, funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research, included 160 patients and randomly assigned them to receive digoxin or beta-blockers for 12 months.  An economic analysis was conducted to work out cost-effectiveness.

 

Among the patients who received digoxin, there were substantially less adverse events than with beta-blockers, including lower rates of hospital admission and general practice reviews for heart health. This resulted in an average cost saving of £530 per-patient per-year with digoxin.  Extrapolating these results to the UK NHS, the researchers identified a potential cost saving of £102 million per year, which represents nearly 6% saving on the £1.7 billion spent annually on atrial fibrillation. 

 

Professor Sue Jowett, Deputy Head of the Health Economics Unit at the University of Birmingham and corresponding author of the study commented:

 

“This study highlights the importance of health economic assessments and the role they can play to deliver appropriate treatments within the health service. At the usual £20,000 per quality-adjusted life year threshold, the probability of digoxin being cost-effective compared to beta-blockers was 94%, which could lead to substantial savings if the trial results were adopted more broadly in this population.”

 

Professor Dipak Kotecha from the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences at the University of Birmingham and the chief investigator of the trial said:

 

“Heart conditions such as atrial fibrillation and heart failure are expected to double in prevalence over the next few decades, leading to a large burden on patients as well as substantial impact on health systems around the world.  Despite being one of the oldest drugs in use for heart disease, this study confirms an important role for digoxin in the management of these patients, providing safe and cost-effective treatment.”

 

No evidence that maternal sickness during pregnancy causes autism





NYU Langone Health / NYU Grossman School of Medicine




While many studies have reported a link between a mother’s health condition during pregnancy and her child’s risk of autism, a new study shows that nearly all of these “associations” can otherwise be explained by factors such as genetics, exposure to pollution, and access to healthcare.

Led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, the study revealed that, of the few conditions truly associated with autism, all were actually complications with the fetus — leading the authors to believe that those symptoms were early signs of autism in the child and not the cause of it. 

“Our study shows that there is no convincing evidence that any of these other diagnoses in the mother can cause autism,” said study senior author Magdalena Janecka, PhD, an associate professor in the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and in the Department of Population Health, at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. 

Publishing in the journal Nature Medicine online Jan. 31, the new study included an analysis of 
the medical histories of more than 1.1 million pregnancies (among 600,000 mothers) from a national registry in Denmark. Unlike medical records in the United States, which are often scattered among many different medical providers an individual sees during their lifetime, in Denmark all of an individual’s health records are consolidated under a single government-issued number, which enabled researchers to check each woman for more than 1,700 distinct diagnoses as defined by international standards, known as ICD-10 codes. From these, researchers focused their analysis on those diagnosed in at least 0.1% of pregnancies (236 diagnoses).

“We believe our study is the first to comprehensively examine the entire medical history of the mother and explore a wide range of possible associations, controlling for multiple concurrent conditions and confounding factors,” said study lead author Vahe Khachadourian, MD, PhD, MPH, a research assistant professor in the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

Denmark has strict safeguards in place to prevent misuse of the registry data, says Janecka, since it contains personal information. But because of the individual-specific information, the researchers were able to cross-check every diagnosis a woman had had with her children’s risk of autism.  

For the study, the researchers corrected for factors that could confound, or offer an alternative explanation for, the link between the diagnosis a woman received and a child’s autism diagnosis. These factors include sociodemographic status and the mother’s age during pregnancy, since children of older mothers are more likely to be diagnosed with autism, and their mothers are also more likely to receive certain diagnoses, such as hypertension, than their younger counterparts. 

After accounting for these confounding factors, as well as for concurrent diagnoses, 30 were still statistically associated with autism in the child. To determine if these happened to occur alongside rather than cause autism, the researchers then included the siblings of autistic children in the analysis. If a mother was diagnosed with the same condition during pregnancies of children with and without autism, then it would suggest that factors other than her diagnosis were influencing the link with autism. This step disentangled the conditions that could be attributable to familial factors, such as genetics and environmental exposure to pollution, from those that may be causing autism. 

Genetics is a strong familial confounder (plausible explanation) for autism, the researchers say. Certain genes that increase the risk of someone having depression are also more closely tied to them having autism. If a woman suffers a bout of depression during pregnancy and her child is autistic, it is much more likely that mother and child share genes that cause both conditions, rather than that the chemical effects of depression somehow affected the fetus to cause autism during development. 

Researchers also analyzed fathers’ medical histories. Any association between a paternal diagnosis and autism would most likely be caused by familial factors, since the father’s direct effects on a fetus postconception are likely very limited. In fact, the researchers observed that a lot of paternal diagnoses are just as related to child autism as the maternal diagnoses.

After accounting for the familial factors, the only maternal diagnosis that was still strongly statistically associated with autism was pregnancy complications related to the fetus. 

“Our interpretation is that these fetal diagnoses likely do not cause autism, but are instead early signs of it,” said Janecka. “The predominant hypothesis is that autism really starts prenatally. Even before a child receives a diagnosis for autism, developmental changes have been happening the entire time. 

“Many mothers of children with autism feel guilty about it,” said Janecka, “thinking that they did something wrong during pregnancy, and it is heartbreaking. I think showing that these things are not going to cause autism is important and may lead to more effective ways to support autistic children and their families.”

Autism is recognized as a developmental disorder that often appears in childhood and is marked by a range of difficulties with social interactions and repetitive behaviors. Symptoms vary widely into adulthood but can include reduced eye contact, reluctance to engage in playtime activities, repeating gestures or sounds, and an indifference to temperature extremes. According to federal estimates, one in every 54 children in the United States is affected by autism.

Funding support for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grants R01MH124817 and T32MH122394, Lundbeck Foundation grants R102-A9118 and R155- 2014-1724, the Seaver Foundation, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development grant HD098883.

Other study co-investigators are Elias Speleman Arildskov, Jakob Grove, and Stefan Nygaard Hansen at Aarhus University in Denmark; Paul O’Reilly, Joseph Buxbaum, Abraham Reichenberg, and Sven Sandin at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City; Lisa Croen at Kaiser Permanente Northern California in Oakland; and Diana Schendel at Drexel University in Philadelphia. 

Media Inquiries:
David March
212-404-3528
David.March@NYULangone.org 

STUDY LINK WILL BECOME ACTIVE AFTER EMBARGO LIFT:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-024-03479-5 

STUDY DOI: 
10.1038/s41591-024-03479-5
 

 

New study reveals optimized in vitro fertilization techniques to boost coral restoration efforts in the Caribbean




PeerJ
Figure 1: Study species. 

image: 

A) Diploria labyrinthiformis, (B) Colpophyllia natans, (C) Pseudodiploria strigosa, and (D) Orbicella faveolata. Gametes collected from these species were used in a series of fertilization assays to quantify the influence of sperm concentration, gamete age, and gamete co-incubation time on IVF success. 

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Credit: Photo credits: Lars ter Horst.




A recent study published in PeerJ Life and Environment unveils refined techniques for in vitro fertilization (IVF) in four key Caribbean coral species, offering a crucial advancement in coral reef restoration efforts. Researchers from SECORE International, the CARMABI Foundation, and the University of Amsterdam have developed new insights into the optimal conditions for coral breeding, which could significantly enhance larval production and bolster declining coral populations.

Study Focus

The study examined four broadcast-spawning coral species: Diploria labyrinthiformisColpophyllia natansPseudodiploria strigosa, and Orbicella faveolata. These species are essential for maintaining the Caribbean’s marine ecosystems, yet their populations have been severely impacted by climate change, diseases, and other anthropogenic factors.

Key Findings

  • Gamete Viability: Coral gametes remain viable for at least four hours after collection, allowing researchers to mix gametes from multiple sites to enhance genetic diversity.
  • Fertilization Timing: Brain corals (D. labyrinthiformis, C. natans, and P. strigosa) fertilize quickly—within just 15 minutes of sperm-egg co-incubation—reducing handling risks.
  • O. faveolata Requirements: This foundational reef-building coral requires longer co-incubation times (60-120 minutes) for optimal fertilization success.
  • Sperm Concentration: Minimum sperm concentration thresholds were identified at 10⁵-10⁶ cells/mL, providing critical benchmarks for IVF protocols.

These findings offer actionable guidelines for coral IVF practitioners, enabling higher larval yields while minimizing gamete wastage and embryo damage. Such advancements could help restore isolated coral populations and counteract natural sperm limitations in the wild.

Implications for Coral Restoration

Coral reefs are among the most biodiverse and threatened ecosystems on the planet, and breeding corals for restoration is emerging as a key tool in their recovery. By optimizing fertilization techniques, restoration practitioners can scale up efforts to repopulate degraded reefs with healthy, genetically diverse corals.

“Our study highlights the importance of tailoring IVF protocols to specific coral species,” said Dr. Valérie F. Chamberland, lead author and researcher at SECORE International. “By fine-tuning these methods, we can increase the efficiency and impact of coral restoration projects, giving these vital ecosystems a better chance of recovery.”

The study also underscores the potential of IVF to overcome reproductive barriers in coral populations that are geographically isolated or genetically disconnected, expanding the possibilities for large-scale restoration initiatives.

Looking Ahead

The findings of this study will be directly applied to improve coral breeding protocols and distributed within SECORE’s network of restoration practitioners. With climate change continuing to threaten coral reefs worldwide, advancements like these are crucial for preserving marine biodiversity and the livelihoods that depend on healthy oceans.

 

New study reveals how reduced rainfall threatens plant diversity




Hun-Ren Ökológiai Kutatóközpont
The experimental area in Fülöpháza, Central Hungary 

image: 

Chronic precipitation treatments (along with decreasing aridity: severe drought, moderate drought, control and water addition) simulates changes in precipitation that have occurred several times historically. The image shows severe drought management, which excludes all rainfall from late June to late August. Prior to chronic treatments, half of the plots were exposed to an extreme treatment which simulated a drought unprecedented since the beginning of regional measurements.

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Credit: Photo: Dr. György Kröel-Dulay




Predicting and mitigating the effects of climate change while preserving biodiversity is a top priority for both scientists and policymakers. As climate change intensifies, leading to more frequent and severe droughts, understanding the impact on natural ecosystems has become increasingly important. One of the main challenges is forecasting changes in species richness due to shifts in precipitation patterns. While it’s established that, on a broad geographic scale, regions with more water generally support greater plant diversity, results vary at smaller plot levels concerning how rainfall affects species richness. To improve predictions, it’s essential to explore the underlying mechanisms – particularly how intense droughts and long-term rainfall changes impact biodiversity. A new study shows that increased aridity at the plot level is indeed linked to a decrease in plant species richness, and this connection is even more pronounced following extreme droughts. However, this phenomenon is not easy to detect because in the absence of drought, dominant plant species can obscure this effect.

The study, carried out by the HUN-REN Centre for Ecological Research in Hungary, examines the intricate connections between long-term changes in rainfall, extreme drought conditions, the biomass of dominant plant species, and plant species diversity in a dryland ecosystem. Published in the Journal of Ecology, the research reveals that increased dryness leads to a reduction in plant species diversity in drylands and uncovers the mechanisms through which rising aridity contributes to biodiversity loss in these fragile ecosystems.

Using data from a seven-year climate change field experiment, researchers conducted a path analysis to examine how precipitation influences species diversity, both directly and indirectly. The experiment simulated an extreme drought event followed by long-term variations in summer rainfall with the use of rainout shelters. Initial analysis showed a strong positive relationship between rainfall and species diversity after extreme drought treatment, but this effect was absent without drought. Interestingly, the path analysis uncovered another layer: in the absence of drought, increased rainfall boosted the biomass of dominant grass species, leading to a decrease in overall plant diversity. Nevertheless, the direct effect of rainfall remained positive, enhancing species richness even when dominant species exerted a suppressive impact. Additionally, the study revealed that past extreme droughts strengthened the link between rainfall and species diversity. Lead author Dr. Gábor Ónodi explains, “Droughts weaken dominant species, creating opportunities for other plants to thrive, potentially altering the plant community.”

These findings have significant implications for predicting how natural ecosystems will respond to future climate change. Dr. György Kröel-Dulay, the lead researcher of the field experiment, notes “As global temperatures rise and precipitation patterns become more extreme, ecosystems may become increasingly sensitive to changes in water availability.” The study underscores the importance of considering both direct and indirect effects when evaluating the impact of climate change on biodiversity. Senior author Dr. Zoltán Botta-Dukát adds, “By deepening our understanding of these dynamics, we can better anticipate upcoming challenges and develop more effective strategies for conserving biodiversity in a world facing growing environmental uncertainties.”

We investigated changes in plant species richness of the Pannonic sand steppe in 2 × 2 m plots and assessed the biomass of the dominant grass species (Festuca vaginata) in the plots.

Credit

Photo: eLTER Grand Campaign 2023

Friday, January 31, 2025

 

First-ever ethics checklist for portable MRI brain researchers



University of Minnesota




MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (01/31/2025) — Portable MRI (pMRI) technologies are rapidly transforming the landscape of neuroscience research, allowing neuroscientists to acquire brain data in community settings outside the hospital for the first time. But as neuroscientists increase access to MRI technology and move their research from a lab environment to broad community settings, they face novel ethical, legal, and societal issues (ELSI).

To prepare neuroscientists to address these challenges, an interdisciplinary team of scientists, ethicists, and legal experts, supported by an NIH BRAIN Initiative grant, analyzed the issues. The team released the first-ever checklist tool that offers practical operational guidance for pMRI researchers. 

The “Portable MRI Research ELSI Checklist”, published in the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, walks pMRI researchers through the entire research lifecycle: creating research protocols, preparing for scanning, conducting scanning, and responding to participant needs after scanning. The tool focuses on ELSI issues and unique challenges such as participant safety, incidental findings, informed consent and data privacy. 

“This is exactly what researchers in the field need — something tangible that they can put into action immediately to improve portable MRI research,” said Damien Fair, director of the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain and MacArthur Fellow.

“Portable MRI researchers are at the cutting edge of science, and they need concrete tools like this Checklist,” said Francis Shen, University of Minnesota professor in the Law School, and lead author of the study. “It will enable more rigorous, inclusive and equitable neuroscience research.”

This research project, funded by a $1.6 million 4-year grant from the National Institutes of Health BRAIN Initiative, is based at the University of Minnesota’s Consortium on Law and Values in Health, Environment & the Life Sciences, chaired by Susan Wolf and co-chaired by Francis Shen. 

About the Consortium on Law and Values in Health, Environment & the Life Sciences
Founded in 2000, the Consortium on Law and Values in Health, Environment & the Life Sciences links 22 member centers working across the University of Minnesota on the societal implications of biomedicine and the life sciences. The Consortium publishes groundbreaking work on issues including genetic and genomic research, oversight of nanobiology, cutting-edge neuroscience, and ethical issues raised by advances in bioengineering.
 

Reconstructed garments from Faras on display in Berlin




SWPS University
Presentation of re-created costumes based on wall paintings from the cathedral of Faras 

image: 

Presentation of re-created costumes based on wall paintings from the cathedral of Faras.

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Credit: Photo: Paulina Matusiak, Eddie Wenting




Nubian costumes meticulously recreated of School of Form designers will soon be showcased at Berlin's Bode-Museum. 

Weaving archaeology into costume design

Archaeologists from the University of Warsaw collaborated with designers from the School of Form to recreate five outfits once worn by kings, royal mothers, and a bishop of medieval Nubia—a historical region that encompasses parts of southern Egypt and northern Sudan. Their work was based on wall paintings from the Faras Cathedral, which are now part of the collections of the National Museum in Warsaw and the Sudan National Museum in Khartoum.

Restoring the original colors of the medieval robes was a key aspect of the reconstruction process. The designers used traditional dyeing techniques and natural pigments, drawing on the archaeological research of Dr. Magdalena Woźniak from the University of Warsaw and the expertise of Dr. Katarzyna Schmidt-Przewoźna from the School of Form. The dyed fabrics were then adorned with stencil-printed patterns, hand embroidery, and appliqués.

One of the biggest challenges was translating the silhouettes depicted in the wall paintings into three-dimensional garments. This included incorporating elements not visible in the frescoes but known from Byzantine tradition. The final result was a true team effort, bringing together experts from various fields.

Read more about the costume reconstruction process

Special exhibition in Berlin

The reconstructed costumes were first presented to the public last October during a live event at the Louvre in Paris. Now, they will be displayed at Bode-Museum in Berlin, alongside selected textiles from the collections of the Museum of Byzantine Art and the Museum of Islamic Art.

The exhibition, Dress to Impress: Reconstructions of Medieval Robes from Nubia, runs from February 6 to April 12. A live event featuring models showcasing the garments is planned after the exhibition's closing.

Find exhibition details on the museum's website

Practical information

Dress to Impress. Reconstructions of Medieval Robes from Nubia

Where: Bode-Museum in Berlin

When: February 6–April 12, 2025