MATERIALS AND METHODS: From a PSA screening initiative, 161 men were shown to have elevated PSA levels in their blood and underwent prostatic tissue biopsy. DNA was extracted from the blood, and exon 1 of the AR gene amplified by PCR and sequenced. The number of CAG repeat sequences were counted and compared to the immunohistochemical expression of ERG and AR in the matched tumour biopsies.
RESULTS: Of men with elevated PSA, 89 were diagnosed with prostate cancer, and 72 with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). There was no significant difference in the length of the CAG repeat in men with prostate cancer and BPH. The CAG repeat length was not associated with; age, PSA or tumour grade, though a longer CAG repeat was associated with tumour stage. ERG and AR were expressed in 36% and 86% of the cancers, respectively. There was no significant association between CAG repeat length and ERG or AR expression. However, there was a significant inverse relationship between ERG and AR expression. In addition, a significantly great proportion of Indian men had ERG positive tumours, compared to men of Malay or Chinese descent.
CONCLUSIONS: CAG repeat length is not associated with prostate cancer or expression of ERG or AR. However, ERG appears to be more common in the prostate cancers of Malaysian Indian men than in the prostate cancers of other Malaysian ethnicities and its expression in this study was inversely related to AR expression.
METHODS: A review protocol constructed by a panel of experienced academic reviewers was used to formulate the methodology, research design, search strategy and selection criteria. An extensive literature search was conducted between March-June 2020 in various major electronic biomedical databases including PubMed, EMBASE, MEDLINE and ScienceDirect. A systematic review and meta-analysis (PRISMA) were selected as the preferred item reporting method.
RESULTS: Out of a total of 34 peer-reviewed dengue-related KAP studies that were identified, 15 published from 2000 to April 2020 met the inclusion criteria. Based on the meta-analysis, a poor mean score was obtained for each of knowledge (68.89), attitude (49.86) and preventive practice (64.69). Most respondents were equipped with a good knowledge of the major clinical signs of dengue. Worryingly, 95% of respondents showed several negative attitudes towards dengue prevention, claiming that this was not possible and that enacting preventive practices was not their responsibility. Interestingly, television or radio was claimed as the main source of gaining dengue information (range 50-95%). Lastly, only five articles (33.3%) piloted or pretested their questionnaire before surveying, of which three reported Cronbach's alpha coefficient (range 0.70 to 0.90).
CONCLUSION: This review indicates that to combat the growing public health threat of dengue to the Philippines, we need the active participation of resident communities, full engagement of healthcare personnel, promotion of awareness campaigns, and access to safe complementary and alternative medicines. Importantly, the psychometric properties of each questionnaire should be assessed rigorously.
METHODS AND RESULTS: Autophagy level in the HCC patient-derived cancer and non-cancer tissues was determined by immunohistochemistry (IHC) targeting SQSTM1, LC3A and LC3B proteins. Significance tests of clinicopathological variables were tested using the Fisher's exact or Chi-square tests. Gene and miRNA expression assays were carried out and analyzed using Nanostring platform and software followed by validation of other online bioinformatics tools, namely String and miRabel. Autophagy expression was significantly higher in cancerous tissues compared to adjacent non-cancer tissues. High LC3B expression was associated with advanced tumor histology grade and tumor location. Nanostring gene expression analysis revealed that SQSTM1, PARP1 and ATG9A genes were upregulated in HCC tissues compared to non-cancer tissues while SIRT1 gene was downregulated. These genes are closely related to an autophagy pathway in HCC. Further, using miRabel tool, three downregulated miRNAs (hsa-miR-16b-5p, hsa-miR-34a-5p, and hsa-miR-660-5p) and one upregulated miRNA (hsa-miR-539-5p) were found to closely interact with the abovementioned autophagy-related genes. We then mapped out the possible pathway involving the genes and miRNAs in HCC tissues.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that autophagy events are more active in HCC tissues compared to the adjacent non-cancer tissues. We also reported the possible role of several miRNAs in regulating autophagy-related genes in the autophagy pathway in HCC. This may contribute to the development of potential therapeutic targets for improving HCC therapy. Future investigations are warranted to validate the target genes reported in this study using a larger sample size and more targeted molecular technique.