Sunday, November 05, 2023

  

NIH grants support UCLA and Charles Drew University researchers' efforts to end HIV epidemic


Grant and Award Announcement

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - LOS ANGELES HEALTH SCIENCES




NIH grants support UCLA and Charles Drew University researchers' efforts to end HIV epidemic

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has granted $2.1 million to UCLA’s Center for HIV Identification, Prevention, and Treatment Services (CHIPTS) and the UCLA-CDU Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) to support four research projects and an implementation science consultation hub. These awards will fund projects to strengthen research-community collaborations and enhance implementation strategies needed for the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) initiative.

“These awards will support our scientists and community partners to address the systemic factors impacting our most vulnerable populations and explore innovative implementation strategies to help end the HIV epidemic,” said Steve Shoptaw, CHIPTS director and professor of family medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “We also look forward to continuing to support the research priorities of the EHE initiative through our Implementation Science Hub.”

Funded projects include:

Advancing HIV Implementation Research (Implementation Science Consultation Hub)

Implementation science plays an important role in the advancement of HIV research. The field recognizes that healthcare systems, public health agencies and communities often struggle to provide high quality services with limited resources. Alison Hamilton, professor-in-residence of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at UCLA’s Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and chief officer of implementation and policy at the VA Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation & Policy at Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, will lead the UCLA Rapid, Rigorous, Relevant Implementation Science Hub, which will offer tailored coaching, training, and technical assistance to NIH-supported implementation research projects across the U.S. in efforts to end the HIV epidemic .

Addressing HIV Risk Among Vulnerable Youth

Dallas Swendeman, associate professor in the Division of Health Promotion and Behavioral Science in the School of Public Health at San Diego State University and a licensed clinical psychologist, will lead a project that explores strategies to support the implementation of an intervention to reduce HIV risk among sexual and gender minority and racial/ethnic minority youth aged 12 to 24. These groups face disproportionate risk of acquiring HIV due to various factors, including low uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), yet effective and scalable interventions for youth remain limited. This study will accelerate implementation of the Adolescent HIV Medicine Trials Network (ATN) Protocol 149 Optimizing the HIV Prevention Continuum for Youth. The researchers will collaborate with community partners to explore implementation strategies for this intervention and prepare for application in real-world settings.

 

Enhancing HIV Prevention for Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals

Erik Storholm, professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel Institute, will lead a project to address low PrEP uptake and persistence among transgender and nonbinary individuals (TGNB) at-risk of HIV in Los Angeles County. Multiple syndemic barriers have been found to contribute to low PrEP uptake and persistence among TGNB individuals, such as intimate partner violence (IPV) and mental health burdens. This project will assess implementation outcomes and preliminary effects of integrating IPV prevention and mental health services into an ongoing gender-affirming PrEP program at a Los Angeles-based trans community center.

Reducing Barriers to HIV Prevention and Treatment among Black Americans

Black Americans are disproportionately affected by HIV, particularly young Black sexual minority men. Laura Bogart, professor-in-residence of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel Institute and chief officer of implementation and policy at the VA Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation & Policy at Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System will lead a study to enhance the implementation strategies and create a sero-status neutral version of the Rise intervention, a culturally tailored program to address adherence and retention barriers among Black individuals with HIV. Rise intervention, built on a 17-year community-academic partnership, will be expanded and tailored to address PrEP and antiretroviral therapy (ART) uptake and adherence among Black Americans in Los Angeles County  and in Jefferson County, Alabama.

Improving PrEP Access for Black, Latino Sexual Minority Men and People who Inject Drugs

Dr. Gabriel Edwards, associate project scientist at the Geffen School, aims to bridge disparities in PrEP uptake among Black and Latino sexual minority men and people who inject drugs. The study will partner with the Los Angeles Centers for Alcohol and Drug Abuse (L.A. CADA) to provide community outreach to expand HIV testing and linkage with PrEP navigators to help facilitate PrEP medication access. The study will identify factors affecting successful linkages to PrEP in order to develop recommendations for improvement.

“Taken together, these awards reflect UCLA’s and CDU’s commitment to ending the HIV epidemic through innovative and community-focused approaches by focusing on populations most impacted by HIV and addressing the systemic barriers that put these populations at risk,” said LaShonda Spencer, director of Drew CARES and professor of pediatrics and internal medicine at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science.


Researchers launch first study of a vaginal film that dissolves in 30 days to assess its acceptability as a potential HIV prevention method for women


Study taking place in US and sub-Saharan Africa will also help inform final design of a monthly film containing dapivirine


Business Announcement

MATRIX: A USAID PROJECT TO ADVANCE THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF INNOVATIVE HIV PREVENTION PRODUCTS FOR WOMEN





PITTSBURGH – November 2, 2023 – A vaginal film designed to slowly dissolve over the course of 30 days is being put to the test for the first time in a study launched this week that aims to determine its feasibility and acceptability as a potential HIV prevention method for women.

The study, which is being conducted in the United States and Africa by MATRIX, a United States Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded project focused on the early research and development of innovative HIV prevention products for women, will help inform the final design of a monthly film containing the antiretroviral (ARV) drug dapivirine. The monthly dapivirine film is one of nine products being developed under MATRIX, which also includes a dual-purpose monthly film containing both dapivirine and a hormonal contraceptive to prevent pregnancy.

Similar to thin breath mint strips that dissolve in the mouth, vaginal films are products designed to dissolve after being inserted into the vagina. Previous studies exploring the use of vaginal films as a drug delivery method for HIV prevention have been of quick-dissolve films or films designed to dissolve within a week.

In the new study, known as MATRIX-002, researchers are assessing the acceptability, usability and safety of two prototype monthly vaginal films that contain no active drug. In this way, they will be able to learn what refinements may be needed in the film’s design, including to its shape, before conducting a first-in-human study of the monthly dapivirine film.

MATRIX-002 will enroll 100 women, as well as 30 sexual partners, at five sites in Kenya, South Africa, Zimbabwe and the United States. Enrollment of the first participants took place at the US site, based at the University of Pittsburgh and Magee-Womens Research Institute (MWRI), which is also where the monthly dapivirine vaginal film products are being developed.

“By conducting a study of placebo films with no active drug, we will be able to answer fundamentally important questions. For instance, are women, especially African women, comfortable with the idea of using a vaginal film that takes 30 days to dissolve? What kind of support and counseling will they need to use it properly?,” noted Nyaradzo Mgodi, MBChB, MMed, MATRIX-002 protocol co-chair and investigator of record at the Harare Health and Research Consortium (HHRC) Zengeza clinical research site (CRS) in Zimbabwe, one of the five sites conducting the study.

“We are fully aware of the urgent need for more HIV prevention methods for women, but we also don’t want to rush into study of a new product with design features that may not be to the liking of women and could therefore impact product use. Something as simple as the shape of the film, or how it feels to the touch, are important considerations that are best resolved as early in the process as possible,” added Alexandra Minnis, PhD, a behavioral scientist from RTI International, Berkeley, Calif., who is protocol co-chair.

A key focus of MATRIX is being responsive to end-user and stakeholder feedback during the earliest stages of product development to inform decisions about product design and improve the odds for success of the products in its portfolio, which is why a study like MATRIX-002 is being conducted and why it is designed the way it is – evaluating two prototype vaginal films, both of which are of similar size (2” x 2”) but differ in their shape, one having straight corners and the other rounded corners. If not for the feedback that came out of stakeholder consultations convened in Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe in 2022, during which prototype films were passed around, the MATRIX-002 study would have instead concentrated on the original square design. But upon learning that advocates and young women, in particular, disliked the straight corners of the film, researchers modified its shape by rounding the corners, recognizing also that this modification would result in a slightly higher product cost. While cost is an important factor to consider, so too are the preferences of women who will actually use the film, insight into which the MATRIX-002 study will provide.

As such, women who enroll in the study will be randomly assigned to use one of the two placebo films – either a film with straight corners or one with rounded corners. Participants will use their assigned film twice, for one month each. During the first month of film use, women are to refrain from vaginal sex and vaginal product use. During the second month, when a new film will be used, there will be no such restrictions. Women will insert the films themselves in the clinic with study staff providing guidance and instructions. As part of the study, participants will be asked questions about their experiences, including likes and dislikes, with film use, and up to 35 participants will also be asked to participate in an in-depth interview so that the study can gain deeper insight into women’s experience with and views about the film. In-depth interviews will also be conducted with approximately 30 sexual partners.

The study is expected to be underway at all five clinical research sites (CRS) by early 2024, which in addition to the University of Pittsburgh/MWRI and the HHRC CRS in Zimbabwe, includes the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) Centre for Clinical Research Thika CRS and two sites in South Africa: the Aurum Institute Klerksdorp CRS and the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute (Wits RHI) CRS in Johannesburg.

Follow-up of all participants is anticipated to be completed in July or August 2024, with study results anticipated by the end of the year (2024). MATRIX would then expect to be conducting the first-in-human study of the monthly dapivirine film in 2025.

Dapivirine is already known to be safe and effective for preventing HIV when formulated as a monthly vaginal ring, and in fact, the dapivirine vaginal ring has been recommended by the World Health Organization as an additional HIV prevention option for women and approved for use in several African countries, including Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe. The monthly film containing dapivirine is designed so that when it is placed inside the vagina and comes in contact with vaginal fluid, it will slowly begin to dissolve, and in doing so, release dapivirine. The drug would continue to be slowly released over the course of a month until the film completely dissolves and all of the drug has been delivered in the vagina. This means that there would be nothing to remove or discard before inserting a new film for another month of protection.

Development of both the monthly dapivirine film and the monthly dual-purpose dapivirine and contraceptive film is being conducted by a team of researchers at the University of Pittsburgh and MWRI under the direction of Lisa Rohan, PhD, professor of pharmaceutical sciences, University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy, and professor of obstetrics, gynecology & reproductive sciences, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Both products are being developed in collaboration with the Population Council, a global nonprofit research organization, which acquired the dapivirine product pipeline from the International Partnership for Microbicides.

According to UNAIDS, women and girls accounted for 63 percent of all new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa in 2022, versus 46 percent globally. In much of Africa, daily oral PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis), which requires taking an ARV tablet every day, is the only biomedical prevention method available. Daily pill-taking has been especially challenging for adolescent girls and young women. Despite the dapivirine ring and cabotegravir long-acting injectable (CAB-LA) both being recommended by WHO and approved in several African countries, neither method is yet widely available. Even so, women have different preferences and needs, and at different times in their lives, which is why additional options are needed.

MATRIX is a five-year program funded by USAID in 2021 that aims to expedite the research and development of HIV prevention products for women – including products designed to protect against both HIV and pregnancy – that in addition to being safe and effective, will be acceptable, affordable, scalable and deliverable in the settings where they are needed most. MATRIX activities are focused on the early research and development of products, which involves both pre-clinical research and the first clinical trials of products. Through its North-South partnerships, MATRIX also aims to strengthen the capacity of African investigators to facilitate full and sustainable ownership of this work into the future. MATRIX is being implemented by Magee-Womens Research Institute (MWRI) in collaboration with partner organizations based in Kenya, South Africa, the United States and Zimbabwe. Leading the project is Sharon Hillier, Ph.D., of MWRI and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, with Thesla Palanee-Phillips, Ph.D., from the Wits RHI and University of Witwatersrand, South Africa, serving as deputy director.

# # #

To learn about MATRIX go to www.matrix4prevention.org. Click here to read a QA about the dapivirine film and MATRIX-002 study. Additional information about MATRIX-002 can also be found at www.matrix4prevention.org/activity-hubs/clinical-trials/matrix-002.

MATRIX was established through the generous support of the American people through the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

(United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Cooperative Agreement Number 7200AA22CA00002)

The content and views in this document are those of MATRIX and its partners and do not necessarily reflect the views of PEPFAR, USAID or the U.S. Government.

 

Drexel University study projects more water shortfalls in Schuylkill Watershed in next 20 years due to climate change


Philadelphia region could experience as many as 82 more days of water shortfalls due to localized weather impacts of climate change


Peer-Reviewed Publication

DREXEL UNIVERSITY




Research out of Drexel University’s College of Engineering suggests that over the next two decades people living in the Schuylkill Watershed, which includes Philadelphia, could experience as many as 82 more days of water shortfalls due to localized weather impacts of climate change. The projections, which account for changes in population, land use, and climate, indicate that — due to more frequent extreme weather events associated with climate change — the watershed may only be able to meet demand about 67% of the time, a drop of 22% from its current reliability.

Published in the journal Water, the paper is the first to look at the compounding effects of climate change and land use and land cover changes on the natural processes that replenish the Schuylkill watershed. The reductions in streamflow and groundwater stores could equate to drought-like conditions where there will not be enough water to meet the region’s water demand for drinking, irrigation, transportation, energy generation, recreation, and sustaining aquatic ecosystems, according to the researchers.

“The gap between available water and demand is expected to require difficult tradeoffs,” said Mira Olson, PhD, an associate professor in the College of Engineering and principal investigator of the study. “Our current resource management practices do not account for increases in the number of extreme precipitation events coupled with population growth and a related shift in land cover that will result in more runoff — rather than water retention.”

Using a mathematical modeling environment programmed to simulate streamflow based on current watershed management policies, the research team, which included Patrick Gurian, PhD, a professor in the College of Engineering, and former students Achira Amur, PhD, now a post-doctoral researcher at Villanova University, Suna Ekin Kali a doctoral student at LuleÃ¥ University in Sweden and Lena Champlin, PhD, a post-doctoral researcher at Boston University, pulled in soil and land cover data from the U.S. Geological Survey and regional precipitation models from the World Climate Research Programme to make its projections.

After successfully recreating the hydrological dynamics of the Schuylkill watershed in the modeling environment, the team could then change various inputs — from greenhouse gas emission scenarios to population growth in cities and suburbs and their resulting land use changes — to simulate the effects of future climate conditions on the area’s water supply.

Perhaps counterintuitively, the variable that caused the largest increase in projected water shortfalls was an increase in extreme precipitation events. The researchers explained this is because the soil and land cover within the watershed limit how quickly water can be absorbed and how much can be stored at one time. So, while steady rain over a long period of time can replenish a watershed, downpours result in water runoff that is not captured and stored.

Unfortunately, such an uptick in extreme weather events coupled with less precipitation overall during warm seasons, is precisely what climate data, localized from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, is projecting for the Philadelphia region from 2020 to 2040.

What this all means is that water management authorities may need to adjust the policies that govern when and how much water is released from reservoirs to satisfy downstream demand in the watershed area.

“Watershed management requires maintaining a careful balance between the amount of water stored in the ground and natural bodies of water and the amount intentionally retained and released from reservoirs to make up for extended dry stretches in the hydrological cycle. All of these are subject to substantial uncertainties,” Gurian said. “For this reason, we considered multiple climate models, emissions levels, and development scenarios.”

These stretches, the authors note, could result in more frequent low-flow conditions in streams and bodies of water which, coupled with higher temperatures, would result in more evaporation, further exacerbating the problem and requiring management interventions.

“Our current management policies are based on the historical precipitation patterns we’ve experienced over the last 100 years or so, but in just a couple decades that weather is going to be very different and it’s going to require a rebalancing of the system,” Champlin said.

The results of the study are similar to projections made and conditions already being experienced across North America, including the effects of development and extended drought conditions causing dangerously low levels in reservoirs that serve much of southern California, Nevada and Arizona. While the effect on Philadelphia may not be as dire, the authors suggest that their study represents enough of a warning to justify taking a closer look at the region’s water management strategy.

“This finding and this type of modeling is increasingly important as we’re seeing watershed crises unfold in real time across the country,” Amur said. “While climate change is a problem that needs to be addressed on a global scale, understanding its future impacts at a regional level gives us the opportunity to make preparations that could mitigate some of these water shortages and other challenges associated with climate change.”

The next steps for this research, the authors suggest, should involve modeling development that includes green infrastructure and incorporates more detailed data on future climate and land use projections. They would also recommend improving future models to incorporate regional differences in population growth trends to provide a higher resolution picture of the future of the watershed.

"Our findings provide a roadmap for what lies ahead,” Kali said. “To secure the Schuylkill Watershed's ecosystem services, we must not only adapt our practices but also advocate for collaborative efforts in system and policy adaptation for a more resilient and sustainable future.”

 

National Jewish Health doctors identify health disparities for indigenous coal miners with black lung disease


Peer-Reviewed Publication

NATIONAL JEWISH HEALTH




Researchers at National Jewish Health found that Indigenous coal miners may develop disabling black lung disease but are less likely to qualify for medical benefits using currently required lung function standards rather than standards specific to Indigenous populations. 

Black lung (also called coal worker’s pneumoconiosis) is a debilitating respiratory illness that can occur several decades after a miner’s first exposure to coal mine dust. Disease severity can be influenced by adequacy of dust controls, medical surveillance programs for early disease detection, choice of lung function standards to define “abnormal,” and other risk factors such as tobacco smoking. Because Indigenous populations face numerous health disparities, researchers also wanted to assess if they face barriers to federal compensation for black lung disease.

 “Racial disparities in access to benefits for work-related lung disease need to be addressed as updated lung function standards are being implemented,” said Jeremy Hua, MD, MPH, lead author of the study and pulmonologist and occupational/environmental physician at National Jewish Health.

Over the past 16 years, doctors at National Jewish Health have provided free yearly medical screenings for work-related lung disease as part of a federally funded Miners Clinic in Page, Arizona. This part of the country has a substantial proportion of Indigenous coal miners, and approximately 30% of coal reserves west of the Mississippi River are on native lands. Research recently published in the journal Annals of the American Thoracic Society examines how lung function testing results may vary, depending on which standards are used to define what is normal versus abnormal. Investigators also explored how many of the participating coal miners had chest X-ray findings of black lung.

“We found that, for each decade of life, Indigenous coal miners were more likely to have both black lung and lung function impairment than non-Indigenous coal miners,” said Cecile Rose, MD, MPH, senior author of the study, and pulmonologist and occupational/environmental physician at National Jewish Health. Dr. Rose emphasized that, based on the study findings, “more efforts are needed to understand and prevent black lung and other respiratory diseases affecting Indigenous workers.”

National Jewish Health is the leading respiratory hospital in the nation. Founded 124 years ago as a nonprofit hospital, National Jewish Health today is the only facility in the world dedicated exclusively to groundbreaking medical research and treatment of children and adults with respiratory, cardiac, immune and related disorders. Patients and families come to National Jewish Health from around the world to receive cutting-edge, comprehensive, coordinated care. To learn more, visit njhealth.org or the media resources page.

Two million European households could abandon the electrical grid by 2050


Peer-Reviewed Publication

CELL PRESS

Evaluation of self-sufficiency potential for 41 million European homes 

IMAGE: 

EVALUATION OF SELF-SUFFICIENCY POTENTIAL FOR 41 MILLION EUROPEAN HOMES

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CREDIT: JOULE/KLEINEBRAHM ET AL.




Researchers report that 53% of European freestanding homes could have supplied all their own energy needs in 2020 using only local rooftop solar radiation, and this technical feasibility could increase to 75% in 2050. Publishing November 2 in the journal Joule, the study shows that there is no economic advantage for individual households to be fully self-sufficient under current or future conditions, though in some cases the costs are on par with remaining on-grid. The researchers estimate that self-sufficiency will be economically feasible for 5% (two million) of Europe’s 41 million freestanding single-family homes in 2050, if households are willing to pay up to 50% more than the cost of remaining fully grid dependent.

“Our results show that even in 2050 going off-grid won’t be the most economic choice, but it could make sense to invest in these kinds of self-sufficient buildings if you are willing to pay more for self-sufficiency,” says lead author Max Kleinebrahm, an energy economics researcher at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany.

Grid energy costs are rising while renewable energy technology is becoming more affordable. In pursuit of self-sufficiency, more and more households are showing interest in producing their own renewable energy supplies. Kleinebrahm’s team wanted to know how feasible it would be for individual residential buildings in different parts of Europe to become fully self-sufficient, and whether doing so would come with any financial benefits. Though the potential of converting Europe to 100% renewable energy has been considered at the continental, national, and regional scale, this study is the first analysis at the level of individual buildings.

To identify regions and building types that are more amenable to self-sufficiency, the researchers compiled a database of homes across Europe and identified 4,000 homes that were representative of different regions in terms of architecture, household electricity demand, climate conditions, and the local economic framework. Then, the researchers designed optimal energy systems for each representative home that would fully cover electrical and thermal energy needs while minimizing costs. These systems included measures such as rooftop solar panels, small wind turbines, different types of storage systems, heat pump installation, and retrofitting and insulation measures.

Next, the researchers scaled their results up to estimate the technical and economic feasibility of energy self-sufficiency for Europe’s 41 million freestanding single-family homes. Overall, they estimated that 53% of homes could have technically achieved energy self-sufficiency in 2020, and that this proportion could increase to 75% by 2050 with expected improvements in renewable energy and storage technologies. However, becoming fully self-sufficient was more expensive than remaining fully dependent on the grid, both in 2020 and 2050.

Homes in sunny European countries such as Cyprus, Malta, and Italy have more economic potential for self-sufficiency, while northern European countries such as Finland, Norway, and Sweden (where there is a large mismatch between high winter energy needs and solar radiation) have the lowest potential. Regions with larger rooftops, such as Denmark, Slovenia, the Netherlands, and France, also have greater potential for self-sufficiency. The researchers also noted that there is greater potential for self-sufficient buildings in countries with high on-grid electricity costs, such as Germany, since there is less financial incentive to remain on-grid.

Though becoming fully self-sufficient may not be economically advantageous, the researchers demonstrated that partial self-sufficiency—where a building remains connected to the electricity grid but also invests in a photovoltaic system, heat pump, and insulation—could lower household energy costs. The optimal degree of self-sufficiency varied for different buildings and regions, but for one representative building in Germany, the researchers estimated that it would have been cost-optimal to be 73% self-sufficient in 2020 and 78% self-sufficient in 2050.

The researchers note that high carrier costs make leaving the grid more appealing and say that policymakers and utility companies should encourage even fully self-sufficient households to remain connected to the grid. “At a macroeconomic scale it would be less efficient to have a large number of households abandoning the grid rather than supporting it,” says Kleinebrahm.

Since the costs of supporting the grid are shared amongst users, there is also the potential for grid costs to climb further as households choose to leave the grid. “From the social perspective, you have to consider the possibility that very rich households could go off grid, in which case the rest of the grid operation would have to be paid for by economically weaker households,” says Kleinebrahm.

This study is unable to answer questions about how the expanding number of self-sufficient homes would impact electricity demand and electricity markets, but the researchers plan to address those topics in future.

###

This research was supported by the Helmholtz Association.

Joule, Kleinebrahm et al., “Two million European single-family homes could abandon the grid by 2050” https://www.cell.com/joule/fulltext/S2542-4351(23)00402-6

Joule (@Joule_CP), published monthly by Cell Press, is a new home for outstanding and insightful research, analysis, and ideas addressing the need for more sustainable energy. A sister journal to CellJoule spans all scales of energy research, from fundamental laboratory research into energy conversion and storage to impactful analysis at the global level. Visit http://www.cell.com/joule. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.

 

Jawless ‘bite’ from the past: Jurassic fossils shed light on lamprey evolution


Peer-Reviewed Publication

CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES HEADQUARTERS

Reconstruction of the Jurassic (ca. 160 million years ago) lampreys Yanliaomyzon from the Yanliao Biota, northern China 

IMAGE: 

RECONSTRUCTION OF THE JURASSIC (CA. 160 MILLION YEARS AGO) LAMPREYS YANLIAOMYZON FROM THE YANLIAO BIOTA, NORTHERN CHINA

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CREDIT: NICE VISTUDIO



Researchers from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and their collaborators have reported two extremely rare fossil lampreys from the Jurassic of northern China and revised our understanding of lamprey evolution.

The study was published in Nature Communications on Oct. 31.

The precious specimens were discovered in the famed Lagerstätte Yanliao Biota from rocks dating back 158–163 million years. One of them, Yanliaomyzon occisor or "Yanliao sucker killer," is 642 mm long (about 25 inches) and is the largest fossil lamprey ever found.

Both fossils superbly preserve the lampreys' keratinous teeth. After carefully examining the fossils, the scientists reinterpreted lamprey evolution, particularly their feeding apparatus, life cycle, and historic biogeography.

The Jurassic fossils' feeding apparatus strikingly resembles that of the living pouched lamprey Geotria australis, a flesh-feeding species. "Our study resolved these Jurassic lampreys as the closest fossil relatives to extant lampreys," said WU Feixiang, lead author of the study.

"Contrary to conventional wisdom that modern lampreys' ancestors fed on blood, our study showed that these two Jurassic lampreys must be flesh eaters, which foreshadows the flesh-eating habit of the most recent common ancestor of modern lampreys," added WU.

The study also recognized the Jurassic as a watershed in lamprey evolutionary history.

During the earlier Paleozoic era, lampreys may not have been predacious like their living relatives. This is based on consideration of Paleozoic lampreys' dwarfed body size and weak, simply assembled teeth. Furthermore, most other contemporaneous ancient fishes were heavily armored—with hard scales and body covers that prevented these tiny lampreys from biting through. However, as the abundant emergence of the 'advanced' teleost fishes with thinned scales since the Early Jurassic—changes that increased food availability—lampreys also changed.

"The abundant emergence of advanced teleost fishes with thinned scales by the Early Jurassic might have provided an important evolutionary opportunity for lampreys," said WU. "With the enhanced feeding structures, Jurassic lampreys onward were able to grow sufficiently large to meet the energy requirement of the evolution of a 'prolonged' life cycle interposed by the metamorphosis stage and involved in dramatic environmental shifts."

A time-calibrated family tree is the basis of an evolutionary history narrative. Inference of the time tree for lamprey evolution was performed in a Bayesian total-evidence dating framework. "Compared with the parsimony method, Bayesian inference is able to integrate various sources of information in a probabilistic setting while accounting for the uncertainties of the parameters, thus avoiding ad-hoc determinations and partial use of the data," said ZHANG Chi, another corresponding author of the study.

This method also makes possible the inference of ancestral geographical areas for lampreys. The history of the anti-tropical distribution pattern of lampreys has baffled biogeographers due to the extremely thin fossil record of the group. With the calibrations of the Jurassic lampreys, the lineage of the pouched lamprey in the Southern Hemisphere was resolved as the earliest diverged lineage among living lampreys. Thus, the study estimates that modern lampreys originated in the Southern Hemisphere during the Late Cretaceous. This contradicts the conventional wisdom that lampreys originated in the Northern Hemisphere, where most extant lamprey species live.

"This discovery clearly indicates that the extant southern lampreys retain a feeding morphology that already arose in the Jurassic, and that modern lamprey phylogeny is now consistent with a Southern Hemisphere origin, combined with an adaptation to a carnivorous diet," said Prof. Philippe JANVIER of France's National Museum of Natural History, a co-author of the study.

Although large gaps in the long evolutionary history of lampreys still exist, the discovery of Jurassic lamprey fossils is expected to promote more research in the future.

Flesh-eating lampreys Yanliaomyzon from the Jurassic Yanliao Biota  

 

Expanding pharmacists’ role for patients with hypertension could prevent 15 million heart attacks and save $1.1 trillion over 30 years, VCU-led study finds


The study details how pharmacists’ ability to treat patients with hypertension could have a positive impact on both Americans’ quality of life and the U.S. health care system

Peer-Reviewed Publication

VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY




RICHMOND, Va. (Nov. 3, 2023) — If pharmacists had a larger role in prescribing medications to control blood pressure, they could prevent more than 15 million heart attacks, nearly 8 million strokes and more than 4 million cases each of angina and heart failure in the U.S. over 30 years, according to a new Virginia Commonwealth University-led study.

The study, “Cost-Effectiveness of Pharmacist Prescribing for Managing Hypertension in the United States,” which published Friday in JAMA Network Open, details how pharmacists’ ability to treat patients with hypertension directly could have both a positive impact on Americans’ health and quality of life and a significant economic impact on the U.S. health care system. The study is among the first to explore the economics of pharmacist prescribing to improve blood pressure control.

The research team, led by corresponding author Dave Dixon, Pharm.D., of the VCU School of Pharmacy, found that the U.S. health care system could save more than $1.1 trillion over 30 years, a cost savings of $10,162 per patient. Moreover, the study’s authors found that over 30 years, patients could regain more than 30 million “quality-adjusted life years,” or years where their quality of life is significantly higher than it would have been if they were to have a health emergency.

Dixon, the Nancy L. and Ronald H. McFarlane Professor of Pharmacy and chair of the Department of Pharmacotherapy and Outcomes Science at the VCU School of Pharmacy, said these findings support measures that could increase access to care for millions across the country.

“Being that hypertension affects so many Americans – we’re talking about over 100 million people in the U.S. – I think the impact is tremendous because everybody knows somebody with high blood pressure,” said Dixon, who serves as a core faculty member and former director of the Center for Pharmacy Practice Innovation at the VCU School of Pharmacy. “It’s one of the leading causes of heart disease and kidney failure in the world.”

More than 95% of Americans live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, a 2022 study in the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association found. And according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, patients visit their community pharmacist 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. As the U.S. faces a shortage of primary care professionals, Dixon said pharmacists could bridge that gap.

“Pharmacists’ role as health care providers tends to be underused in the community, and this is really about how pharmacists can provide for their communities in a way that improves access to care for hypertension,” said Dixon, who also serves as an affiliate professor of internal medicine in the Division of Cardiology at the VCU School of Medicine.

Most states currently give pharmacists prescribing privileges; however, current federal laws make it difficult for pharmacists to receive reimbursement for the clinical services they provide.

“Although pharmacists currently have some type of prescribing privileges in 49 states and Washington, D.C., they are not recognized as providers under the Social Security Act,” Dixon said. “This is one of the major barriers to implementing these life-saving – and cost-saving – measures for patients.”

The $1.1 trillion in health care savings over 30 years that Dixon and his team identified stem from preventive measures, such as educating patients on high blood pressure and prescribing antihypertensive medication, as well as from helping patients better manage their blood pressure. The ability to offer these services could mean a reduction in cardiovascular emergencies, which is crucial given the increasing mortality rates around hypertension. From 2010-19, there was a 23.1% increase in hypertension-related mortality, according to a 2022 study from the Journal of the American Heart Association.

It could also address poor outcomes for racial and ethnic minority groups, Dixon said. For individuals ages 35-64, Black patients had the highest rates of death due to hypertension of any racial or ethnic group in the U.S., according to a 2020 study in the journal Hypertension. As Dixon and his co-authors state in the study, “pharmacist-led interventions have been shown to significantly improve blood pressure control among Black individuals and individuals of racial and ethnic minoritized groups.”

The team of researchers who contributed to this study includes co-authors Karissa Johnston, Ph.D., of Broadstreet Health Economics and Outcomes Research in Canada; Julie Patterson, Pharm.D., Ph.D., of the National Pharmaceutical Council and formerly of the VCU School of Pharmacy; Carlo A. Marra, Pharm.D., Ph.D., of the School of Pharmacy at the University of Otago in New Zealand; and Ross T. Tsuyuki, Pharm.D., of the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Alberta in Canada.