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What the Artemis Accords mean for space exploration – Space.com
Posted: August 25, 2022 at 1:36 pm
Next week's moon launch is just the beginning.
As the world counts down to the planned Aug. 29 liftoff of the Artemis 1 mission, which will use a Space Launch System (SLS) megarocket to send an uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the moon, NASA and its international partners are already planning for the future.
More than 20 nations have signed on to the NASA-led Artemis Accords, a set of agreements that lay out a framework for responsible exploration of the moon.
And Artemis will have an international flavor going forward. For example, Canada will get a seat on Artemis 2 thanks to its contribution of Canadarm3 robotics to the planned Gateway moon-orbiting station. And Japan will fly an astronaut on a future Artemis moon mission as well.
But over the longer term, NASA plans to use the accords as a set of norms to establish how countries should conduct space exploration more generally, and to govern how they can work together for missions to Earth orbit, the moon or even Mars.
Related: NASA's Artemis 1 moon mission: Live updatesMore: NASA's Artemis 1 moon mission explained in photos
A NASA spokesperson told Space.com by email that the goal of the accords is "safe, responsible and transparent behavior in space," which also includes a discussion of "preserving and protecting the outer space environment to ensure a safe and sustainable future in space for all."
The agency has pledged that the accords will be inclusive of nations both experienced in space (like Canada, Japan and European Space Agency member states) and those that are newer to the final frontier (like New Zealand and Bahrain.) Notably, Russia is not a participant no surprise given its ongoing invasion of Ukraine (an act that brought condemnation from other major space actors) and Russia's recent announcement that it plans to pull out of the ISS agreement at some point after 2024.
Related: Russia wants to build its own space station, as early as 2028
NASA frames the accords as reinforcing the 1967 Outer Space Treaty that underlies international space exploration legal norms. The impending launch of Artemis 1, the spokesperson added, is a turning point during which the agency hopes to establish more detailed guidelines, while Artemis is still young.
"By bringing as many signatories onboard as early as possible, our hope is to develop a body of knowledge, informed by collective operational experiences, that will advance broader goals through established bodies such as the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space [COPUOS]," the spokesperson said.
"Even if some countries cannot make near-term contributions to lunar activities directly, their support of the Artemis Accords principles will strengthen the need for common values for space exploration and utilization among the international community."
Space lawyer Michael Gold said he agrees that the accords are meant to foster an environment in space "conducive to international collaboration, and conducive to growth" with clear rules and expectations to allow space agencies and companies to conduct business.
Gold helped lead and draft the implementation of the Artemis Accords under the previous NASA administrator, Jim Bridenstine, while Gold was acting associate administrator for the agency's office of international and interagency relations. (Today Gold is executive vice president for civil space and external affairsataerospace company Redwire Space.)
The accords, he said, are meant to cover civil activities so that companies landing on the moon on behalf of NASA are covered under the agreement. This is especially crucial given that NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services missions encourage private companies to deliver science, hardware and other essential items to the moon to support the Artemis program.
"All of these are important precedents," Gold said of the accords. Bringing in other countries aims to assure stability of Artemis, since international programs tend to have more financial and technological resources, he added.
But further stability, Gold said, would come if national security programs and commercial space programs could also align on global norms of behavior. "So much of our conflict on Earth is caused by misperception and miscommunications, and if we're going to get into a conflict, at the very least let's have it be intentional," Gold said.
For example, he said that national security norms should govern issues such as how close is too close with regard to satellites approaching each other in Earth orbit. Such encounters are more frequent now than ever due to growing broadband constellations like SpaceX's Starlink and periodic space debris events, like a much-criticized Russian anti-satellite test in November 2021.
"I believe if we're explicit, if we're public about these things, that will give us the best chance that we have of avoiding conflict, particularly via mistakes and misperceptions," Gold said. He called for UN's COPUOS to open up seats for private sector companies to allow for "government and commercial [entities] to work together."
Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter@howellspace (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter@Spacedotcom (opens in new tab)or Facebook.
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To better understand Parkinson’s disease, this San Diego expert sent her own cells to space – The San Diego Union-Tribune
Posted: at 1:36 pm
Jeanne Loring likes to say shes been to space without her feet even leaving the ground.
Just weeks ago, the Scripps Research Institute professor of molecular medicine sent some of her own genetically mapped cells to space as part of first-of-its-kind research to study the progression and onset of Parkinsons disease, multiple sclerosis and other neurodegenerative diseases.
I love traveling. Ive been on all the continents, and so I figured, whats left? Loring said jokingly. I just jumped at the opportunity when I learned that it was possible.
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In July, the cells arrived via cargo spacecraft at the International Space Station, where they remained under close observation for about a month 250 miles above Earth, and traveling at 17,500 miles per hour before they splashed back down to Earth last week.
The study is part of new National Stem Cell Foundation-funded neurodegeneration research to observe how cells communicate in microgravity in a way not possible on Earth, explained Paula Grisanti, founder and CEO of the foundation.
Its really pure exploration at this point, because theres no history of anybody doing this before, she said. Were paving the path.
An organoid derived from Dr. Jeanne Lorings induced pluripotent stem cells is prepared to be sent to the International Space Station.
(Courtesy of Dr. Davide Marotta)
Loring, a Del Mar resident who is one of the worlds leading experts in Parkinsons and a senior scientific advisor for the foundation, has been working with human-induced pluripotent stem cells since the technology was first discovered in 2006.
Called organoids, these cells are made from human skin tissue, which is put into a culture dish and turned into pluripotent stem cells, Loring explained.
Pluripotent stem cells only exist in culture dishes, they dont exist in our bodies, she said. Pluripotent means they can form any cell type in the body so for Loring, that meant forming nerve cells to create brain-like structures.
Its hard to study peoples brains, Loring said. You can do all this external stuff like they do with physical exams, but theres not any window into the brain so this is providing a sort of brain avatar.
Organoids provide a stand-in for the brain that can be studied by researchers, Loring explained. They make connections with each other, the cells talk to each other, so in a lot of ways, its a really good model of the brain, she added.
Moreover, the organoids mimic the brains of people with MS and Parkinsons.
Loring has been working with these organoids for years through Aspen Neuroscience, a San Diego-based company she co-founded that is working to create the worlds first personalized cell therapy for Parkinsons, using a patients own cells so they dont have to worry about rejection. Clinical trials may start as early as next year, she said.
Tubes containing neural organoids are loaded into a rack in preparation for placement in Cube Lab to travel to the International Space Station.
(Courtesy of Space Tango)
For the last four years, the foundations team of bicoastal researchers has been working together to study these organoids in space.
While an experiment in space presents its own challenges, Loring said its worth the work, as researchers hope to gain valuable and unique insight into how disorders like Parkinsons and MS develop. You can see them interacting and talking to each other in 3-D in a way that you cannot on Earth, Grisanti said.
Along with Lorings healthy organoids, which are used as a control, organoids derived from patients with Parkinsons and MS were sent to the space station, while the entire experiment was replicated on Earth.
Specifically, researchers are studying the neuroinflammation in the organoids, which is like when the immune system in the brain is overactive, Grisanti explained.
Organoid cultures are sealed in holders and ready to be placed in Cube Lab for space flight. The cover shows National Stem Cell Foundations SpaceX CRS-25 mission patch.
(Courtesy of Space Tango)
What we hope to find is a point at which things start to go wrong in those neurodegenerative diseases, where we could then intervene with a new drug or cell therapy, she said. And were seeing signs that that happens more in space than it does on the ground, so it helps create the type of interaction that you would see early in a neurodegenerative disease.
Grisanti said they hope to be able to use this research to develop a new drug or cell therapy to treat these disorders and potentially other neurodegenerative diseases in the future.
I think weve cracked the door open, but weve got some more flying to do, she added.
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Northrop Grumman and STAR HARBOR to Collaborate on Commercial Space Station Research and Astronaut Training – Space Ref
Posted: at 1:36 pm
Northrop Grumman space station
Northrop Grumman
Northrop Grumman and STAR HARBOR announced a collaboration for market research and the early development of an astronaut training curricula for Northrop Grummans space station concept. In December 2021 Northrop Grumman signed a Space Act Agreement with NASA under the Commercial Low-Earth Orbit Development program for $125.6 million to design a safe, reliable and cost-effective commercial free-flying space station in low Earth orbit (LEO).
This collaboration establishes STAR HARBORs intentions to utilize Northrop Grummans commercial space station concept as one of the LEO destinations for on-orbit services and training for their customers. The collaboration will explore the development of Northrop Grummans customized astronaut training programs to help define a high standard of safety and customer service for commercial industry spaceflight training and mission implementation. These efforts will help support a thriving future for the new space economy by accelerating humans and technology within the commercial aerospace ecosystem.
The collaboration also explores the development and integration of an optimal pipeline and verification process for STAR HARBORs LAB TO ORBIT R&D program. STAR HARBOR is establishing a robust research pipeline process to support researchers from concept design, prototyping, and testing through flight readiness and mission success. In STAR HARBORs Researcher Training Courses, participants will learn to properly design payloads for the varying flight profiles, space environments, and destinations while receiving expert support to get payloads certified and procured on a flight. STAR HARBORS pipeline will provide an expedited access point to get research and researchers onboard the Northrop Grumman Space Station design.
About Northrop Grumman
Northrop Grumman is a technology company focused on global security and human discovery. Our pioneering solutions equip our customers with capabilities they need to connect, advance and protect the U.S. and its allies. Driven by a shared purpose to solve our customers toughest problems, our 90,000 employees define possible every day.
About STAR HARBOR
STAR HARBOR is creating the worlds first fully comprehensive, publicly accessible spaceflight training facility and cutting-edge research and development campus. STAR HARBORs unique facility will include an aircraft modified for parabolic flight, a 4-million-gallon neutral buoyancy tank with an underwater habitat, a high-gravity human centrifuge, hypobaric and hyperbaric chambers, land-based habitats, high-tech space simulation technology and spacecraft mockups. The STAR HARBOR HUMANS TO ORBIT Astronaut Certification Program is helping to define industry spaceflight safety regulations and standards. STAR HARBOR is committed to positively impacting sustainability and climate science research and education, including creating local, national and international STEAM education opportunities
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Xi Story: Supporting sci-tech innovation from a spark to space – Xinhua
Posted: at 1:36 pm
Screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov. 8, 2021 shows Chinese taikonaut Zhai Zhigang waving his hand after completing extravehicular activities.(Photo by Guo Zhongzheng/Xinhua)
BEIJING, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- The spark of a good idea can have astronomical implications, as the story of a lighting rig developed in the 1980s shows.
On Jan. 20, 1985, in recognition of his innovative lighting rig voice controller, Zhang Xinli was awarded a certificate by Xi Jinping, then Party chief of Zhengding County in Hebei Province, north China.
The lighting rig automatically identifies a change of tone in music and responds by casting various colored lights on the stage. The second-generation voice controller designed from Zhang's invention was included in the provincial scientific research plan in 1985.
When he first heard about Zhang's invention, Xi visited Zhang's factory many times and keenly watched demonstrations of the new equipment. Xi also asked about the sales of their products and suggested Zhang reach out to an art community in Beijing.
Thanks to Xi's introduction, Zhang was later invited to a seminar, where many participants showed great interest in his invention and placed orders.
Zhang later said he never forgets that event, nor the strong support Xi had given to him and his factory.
The certificate that Zhang was awarded witnessed Xi's concern and encouragement for sci-tech innovators. He pays high attention to sci-tech innovation wherever he works.
Xi's encouragement has helped some of the most significant innovative achievements over the past 10 years get off the ground, some of them quite literally.
In December 2020, President Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, congratulated on the complete success of the Chang'e-5 mission that brought back the country's first samples collected from the moon.
It is another major achievement in overcoming difficulties by giving full play to the advantages of the new system of pooling national resources and strength, marking a great step forward in China's space industry, Xi said in a congratulatory message.
In June 2021, he spoke on a video call to three of the nation's astronauts, Nie Haisheng, Liu Boming and Tang Hongbo, stationed in the country's space station core module Tianhe. The Tiangong space station is expected to be completed this year.
"The construction of the space station is a milestone in China's space industry, which will make pioneering contributions to the peaceful use of space by humanity," said Xi.
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Europe to support Artemis CubeSats in return to Moon – European Space Agency
Posted: at 1:36 pm
Enabling & Support
24/08/20221702 views42 likes
Half a century since Apollo, the Artemis I mission is set to launch on 29 August with a test flight that prepares humankind for our next adventure at the Moon, and Europe is playing a crucial role.
Joining NASAs Orion spacecraft on the powerful Space Launch System rocket are ten CubeSats that will help prepare for the return of astronauts to our lunar companion. ESAs deep space antennas, along with the Goonhilly Earth Station in the UK, will be tracking six of the small satellites, ensuring they arrive where they need to be, and their data gets back home.
Each about the size of a large shoe box, their mission objectives vary as much as their final destinations the Moon, Earth orbit, deep space, even an asteroid. What unites them is the promise of enhancing our understanding of the space environment from asteroids to space radiation, while demonstrating new technologies for use on future missions getting humans to the Moon, to stay.
Our Estrack stations will be critical in determining the CubeSat trajectories, returning their data home and supporting the commanding of the six spacecraft,explains Lucy Santana, responsible for ESA ground facility services for deep space missions.
Were very proud to do our bit in returning humankind to the Moon.
About an hour and a half after launch, the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) will perform a trans-lunar injection burn to nudge Orion and the fleet of CubeSats in the direction of the Moon. The CubeSats will then be deployed, dispersing like dandelion seeds spread in the wind.
In the hours after liftoff, CubeSats will be deployed at specific times based on the requirements of each mission. ArgoMoon from the Italian Space Agency (ASI) will be the first that ESA tracks just a few hours after launch with the Cebreros station in Spain.
Very soon after separation, as the rest of the CubeSats are deployed, more eyes on the sky will be needed as they move into their own trajectories. For this, ESA in cooperation with Goonhilly will provide about 75 hours of tracking support across its deep space stations in the two weeks after launch.
We look forward to contributing to this iconic mission from here in the UK. Goonhilly played a role in distributing the Apollo Moon landing footage back in 1969: were now taking one step further and supporting humanitys return to the Moon, explains Matthew Cosby, Chief Technology Officer at Goonhilly.
Our 32m deep space antenna has been used to communicate with ESA spacecraft since 2021. Supporting the Artemis I CubeSats is a fantastic way to further showcase our capabilities as we continue to expand this commercial service.
One of the main ways Estrack will support the Artemis CubeSats is by pinning down their location and trajectory using an effect called the Doppler shift. Each satellite is transmitting information at a frequency of around 8 GHz, which stations on Earth will acquire and track.
If the spacecraft is moving towards Earth while emitting its message, the light wave gets slightly squashed, shortening the wavelength and increasing its frequency. Conversely, if the CubeSat is moving away from Earth, its message is stretched, and its frequency lengthened. With this information, mission control will be able to have an accurate estimation of where the spacecraft are and where they are headed.
The CubeSats being connected to Earth by Goonhilly and ESAs deep space antennas illustrate the potential of small spacecraft in providing great insights.
Lunar IceCube and LunaH-map are designed to search the Moon for water the discovery of which would be crucial for long-term missions as it is needed for explorers to harvest breathable air and create rocket fuel from ice.
Biosentinel and CuSP will add to our understanding of space radiation, filling critical gaps in knowledge about the health risks to explorers in deep space from solar radiation and high-energy galactic cosmic rays.
Finally, ArgoMoon and NEA Scout will demonstrate new operations technologies that will shape the way we fly future missions to the Moon.
NEA Scout will visit the smallest ever asteroid to be studied by a spacecraft 2020 GE is thought to be a little smaller than a school bus. While exploring the asteroid, it will use an 86-square-metre solar sail to harness solar radiation for propulsion.
The data from these first-of-a-kind missions will stream in through European antennas on Earth, where teams will get it where it needs to be and ensure we keep track of the dispersing satellites.
Landing on the Moon was hard. Returning for a longer stay will require even more planning, imagination and ingenuity, and ESAs Estrack network of antennas dotted across the globe will be vital. With decades of experience in ground operations and a global network of eyes on the sky, ESA is playing a leading role in connecting Earth to space as we go forward to the Moon.
Follow @esaoperations live from 12:00 CEST on 29 Aug to get insights straight from the heart of ESA mission control, as the Artemis CubeSats are deployed, found, and spread their wings and Europe helps bring humankind to the Moon, and catch the live stream on ESA Web TV, Channel 1 from 12:30 CEST.
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A legal defense grounded in genetics: Is DNA testing the magic wand to winning (or losing) a negligence case? – Genetic Literacy Project
Posted: August 23, 2022 at 1:10 am
Among the four elements required to establish liability for the tort of negligence is causation. In addition to proving that the defendant was careless or otherwise breached the legal standard of care, the plaintiff must establish that the wrongful conduct caused the harm the plaintiff suffers. This 1941 New Hampshire Supreme Court decision explains:
Necessary elements of a cause of action based on negligence are the causal negligence of the defendant plus the resultant harm to the plaintiff. Putting it another way, there must be negligence and harm and they must have a causal connection.
At the height of asbestos litigation, mesothelioma, a cancer of the lining of the pleural (lung) cavity or the abdominal cavity (peritoneal mesothelioma) was believed to be pathognomonic of asbestos exposure, meaning that the disease was a signal cancer of asbestos exposure, and only asbestos exposure. A diagnosis of the disease was tantamount to legal recovery (and virtually certain and swift death). No longer.
Today, it is recognized that mesothelioma has other causes, including erionite, another naturally occurring mineral used in pet litter, soil conditioners, animal feed, wastewater treatment, and gas absorbents. Radiation is also a recognized cause of mesothelioma, either from employment-related exposures, or older therapeutic uses which are now known to cause disease. And then there are causes we dont even yet know about as well as those arising spontaneously. These are known as idiopathic causes.
Asbestos exposure significantly declined beginning in the 1970s when the first OSHA asbestos laws were enacted. However, the incidence of mesothelioma, even with its notoriously long latency or delay period, is increasing in women, and has remaining constant overall. This lends credence to the fact that mesotheliomas arises from causes other than asbestos or even arises spontaneously, meaning the body needs no help from asbestos or anything else in generating them.
Of course, spontaneously does not mean magically or out of the blue. Rather, of the estimates that perhaps twenty to fifty percent of mesotheliomas dont arise from asbestos, it appears some are attributable to genetic misfirings, or mutations, that arise over time, some occurring as we age, and our defenses or repair mechanisms are no longer functioning optimally. (Think how slow your older computer worked compared to the new one you bought when old-trusty melted down.)
These genetic mutations are not necessarily inherited (although some are), but rather occur in clusters - or more rarely, singly due to natural causes or DNA breakage. The mutations can cause mesothelioma, either alone or by increasing susceptibility to minute exposures. The difference in the causal mechanism, however, has a huge impact on legal liability. And so it is that attention to genetics is now finding its way into the courtroom.
Courts are becoming more attentive to the need to establish that a potential carcinogen is responsible for causing the disease in a particular person, rather than based on its statistical or historical significance for a general population. Recently, in toxic tort cases, some courts are requiring a two-stage level of proof:
Specific causation requires showing that the plaintiff was exposed to a sufficient dose which is capable of causing the disease in that person. The application of this requirement is derailing some talc-mesothelioma cases.
But attention to the plaintiffs burden of proving specific causation is not the only monkey-wrench appearing in toxic tort cases these days. And not all courts are requiring specific quantification of plaintiffs exposure to prove causal-negligence, i.e, that the defendants asbestos caused the particular plaintiffs disease.
This situation invites another option for defense lawyers to protect their clients: genetics. And so we find defense lawyers turning to genetics to establish the defense that it wasnt exposure to asbestos per se, that caused the plaintiffs mesothelioma. Rather it was something else notably, something in their genes.
The genetic defense has found itself into other types of cases as well. And as we learn more about the genetic components of disease, we can expect to find its use burgeoning. Take the case of Bowen v. EI Dupont, in which the plaintiff alleged her retarded fetal growth and birth defects were caused by exposure to the fungicide Benlate during her gestation, when her mother was spraying houseplants.
The defendant obtained a court order to genetically test the plaintiff for a specific genetic variation (CHD7) that causes a specific condition (the CHARGE syndrome, a rare condition that causes birth defects), that resembled the plaintiffs condition. The defense argued that the mutated CHD7 was the sole and proximate cause of the plaintiffs condition a CHARGE syndrome-driven birth defect, a theory with substantial support in the record and substantiated in peer-reviewed literature. After the testing and finding the mutation present, the court dismissed the case.
In a similar case, Naomi Guzman v. ExxonMobil Corp, the plaintiff claimed that she was exposed to radioactive material as a bystander to her fathers work as an oil pipe cleaner. The court granted the defendants request for genetic testing of plaintiffs preserved thyroid tissue.
Genetic tests revealed both that the plaintiff did not have the genetic signature for radiation-induced cancer. It also revealed that plaintiff had several hereditary gene mutations predisposing her to thyroid cancer, leading the defenses expert-toxicologist to conclude her thyroid cancer was caused by her genetic predisposition and not exposure to her fathers drilling pipe. The jury agreed and sided with the defense.
Genetic defenses, however, must be used with care. In some cases, exposure to a chemical overwhelms multiple natural genetic repair mechanisms, leading to the cancer or disease. In those cases, the genetic defense may not work.
Thus, the failure of a genetic-defense mechanism to activate (or activation of a susceptibility gene) may not absolve the defendant, since it was the impact of exposure (to their asbestos or whatever chemical) that caused these genes to malfunction, and which in turn began the chain-reaction leading to the disease.
Instead, focusing on point mutations, where cancers occur as the direct result of a consequential change in a particular genetic set of alleles (subparts of a gene responsible for expression of a particular trait), independent of exposure, present the genetic alterations generating the most success in legal cases.
So far, two genes have been implicated as causally-related to mesothelioma in the absence of asbestos exposure. One, is a mutation on the AKL gene. While the discovery may not help plaintiffs in a legal setting, such discoveries do bode well for enhanced therapeutics and treatment.
Other studies have identified mutations on the BAP1 gene, discoveries that again bode well for possible treatment, although not necessarily for success in the legal setting. The BAPI gene is also related to several other cancers, including melanoma, so the causal connection is not one-on-one. But the BAP1 gene also has an additional effect- not only has it been related to direct causation of mesothelioma, it is also known to enhance susceptibility to prior exposures to asbestos. And that poses a legal problem.
The published findings do not establish a synergistic gene/environment interaction as a causal factor for the development of mesothelioma [and Bap1].,,, At present, it is estimated that between 1 and 8 percent of all spontaneous mesothelioma cases involve BAP1 germline mutations.
Bernier et al.
In law, the defendant is said to take the plaintiff as one finds him/her. That means if a plaintiff, by virtue of his or her individual make-up, is unusually susceptible to a condition, the defendant is still liable for all incident harms of their negligence. These include even those that might not have happened if the same wrongdoing was inflicted on a hardier plaintiff. (The term got its name from a case about running over a plaintiff with a skull as thin as an eggshell).
That maxim makes finding a BAP1 gene problematic. In some cases, the gene will render the plaintiff unusually susceptible to a small amount of exposure; in others it can cause mesothelioma, outright. Where the gene acts as a susceptibility gene, the defendant is still liable. Where it causes the disease outright, the plaintiffs case fails.
At the end of the day, the answer becomes a matter of fact for the jury to decide after listening to a battle of experts. But recent research shows that up to one-third of all cancers are produced by the bodys own mutation errors, and not by environmental causes. The complete genetic-cause defense would likely work best in cases of teenagers or women who were unlikely to have been exposed to significant levels of exposure.
To maintain a genetic defense, the plaintiff would have to petition the court to compel genetic tests of the plaintiff and sometimes the family to show a hereditary defect. Courts usually direct the plaintiff to submit to genetic testing (via blood test or tissue swipe), if the requested tests are particularized enough, although they will often reject requests to compel family-testing.
Is this forced test legal? Yes. First because such tests are not usually invasive; and second, by bringing the lawsuit, the plaintiff has put his condition into controversy and hence waives some rights.
To date, a few dozen personal injury cases have involved court-ordered genetic testing. Most courts have allowed it, especially as the tests are not painful, protracted, or intrusive. (Although, when the genetic tests are to be used for prospective or predictive purposes, such as medical monitoring or gauging the likelihood of future disease severity or longevity, the courts may not agree. In these cases courts often conclude that DNA tests are more speculative in prediction than identifying causal genes in those already suffering a disease).
Most important, however, a defendant who wants to compel a test must seekprecise information or evidence. In other words, like in any litigation discovery procedure, neither party is given largesse to go on a fishing expedition, for example by seeking reems of data, hoping to uncover an unanticipated smoking gun.
This objection wouldnt be typical in the asbestos cases, since specific and responsible genetic culprits have been identified. But we can see the abuse in other cases, notably birth-related negligence cases which often result in a surfeit of issues, such as brain damage, developmental issues, and physical disabilities. To be sure, such conditions can be caused by environmental exposures, poor pre-natal care, or even the birth process itself, especially if negligently performed.
In one birth-related negligence case, Fisher for XSF v. Winding Waters Clinic, the defendant sought a court order compelling the plaintiff to submit to genetic testing to confirm whether their impairments are more likely than not the result of a genetic condition unrelated to prenatal care
The problem was that the defendants had no specific condition in mind. They sought a WES (Whole Exome Sequencing) array meaning they wanted to look through the plaintiffs entire genomic vocabulary in the hopes of finding one or more errors to explain the condition. The court rejected the request.
Recognizing that overbroad requests promote the possibilities for abuse, including privacy violations or the potential to uncover genetic predispositions to numerous unrelated conditions, the court noted that the defendants request was particularly troubling.
Nevertheless, we can expect an onslaught of compelled genetic testing arising out of litigation to continue. As to where the results take us, thats an interesting and open- question. Perhaps the most curious case is the pending matter of Lohmann v. Aaon Inc. There, the defendants experts sought evidence of the BAP-1 disorder. Not only did they want to use it for the litigation, they wanted it for their own research purposes, as well.
Seems the value of these tests is greater than we might imagine. No word yet, on the legal resolution. But Id bet the judge denies the request.
Dr. Barbara Pfeffer Billauer, JD MA (Occ. Health) Ph.D. is Professor of Law and Bioethics in the International Program in Bioethics of the University of Porto and Research Professor of Scientific Statecraft at the Institute ofWorld Politics in Washington DC. Find Barbara on Twitter@BBillauer
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DNA Special: Is the problem of unemployment incurable in Bihar? – DNA India
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Water cannons being used to disperse Central Teacher Eligibility Test (CTET) and Bihar Teacher Eligibility Test (BTET) qualified candidates during a protest demanding permanent jobs, in Patna on Monday | Photo: ANI
A video has surfaced from Patna, the capital of Bihar, where an unemployed youth of Bihar is lying on the road helpless. The one who is beating this young man with a stick is KK Singh, Additional District Magistrate, Patna. In the intoxication of the power of his post, the magistrate is raining his lathi. The youth was holding the tricolour in his hand.
This young man had crossed the barricading with the tricolor in his hand and sat on the road. He started accusing the government of cheating the unemployed. Seeing the young man waving the tricolor, the cameras of the media turned towards him, then the eyes of the ADM also fell on that young man. Seeing the young man talking to the media, his anger exploded.
All this happened when a protest was being held at Dak Bungalow crossroads in Patna regarding the recruitment of teachers for the seventh phase, where about 5,000 unemployed youth who have passed STET and BTET were demonstrating. For the last three years, these unemployed youth have already demonstrated many times for their appointment.
After 8 years in Bihar, in January 2020, the State Teachers Eligibility Test examinations were held, which were conducted in offline mode. But it was canceled after reports of fraud surfaced at some centres. After this, there were re-exams in September 2020, then these exams were online. The youths who passed the examination allege that they have not yet received the appointment letters. For the last two years, only assurance is being given from the government.
The disease of unemployment appears to have become incurable in Bihar. Here are some statistics.
- The unemployment rate in Bihar was 18.8 percent in July, which is more than double the country's unemployment rate of 7.7 percent.
- Data from the National Career Service Portal shows that the number of unemployed youth in Bihar has tripled in the last one year.
- There are 14,15,914 registered unemployed in Bihar, these are the youths who have registered themselves for jobs.
- In Bihar, the number of unemployed youth is more than two and a half lakhs.
However, there is no dearth of vacant posts in government departments of Bihar.
- According to the National Career Service Portal, 2,75,255 posts are vacant in Bihar.
- The maximum number of vacant posts in Bihar is in the Education Department where 1,80,000 posts are lying vacant for teachers.
- A total of 47,099 posts are vacant in the police department, this figure is 34 percent of the total sanctioned posts.
- More than fifty percent of government doctors in Bihar, about 6565 posts are vacant.
- Apart from this, more than 50,000 posts are vacant in the health department.
- Bihar government figures that more than 1 lakh posts are lying vacant in secretariat and district offices.
That is, there is no dearth of employment opportunities in Bihar. The shortfall is in the intention of the government.
READ | JNU: Students clash with security staff over fellowship funds, several injured
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DNA Special: Is the problem of unemployment incurable in Bihar? - DNA India
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What New DNA Testing Could Reveal About The Murder Of JonBent Ramsey 26 Years Later – YourTango
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The death of 6-year-old JonBenet Ramsey on Christmas day 1996 is perhaps one of the countrys greatest and most high-profile unsolved mysteries.
The Ramsey family, once wrapped up in suspicions they were responsible for JonBenets death, has continued to fight for justice. JonBenets father, John Ramsey, has fought to try to find the answers behind his daughters death.
Most recently, the 78-year-old has called on the state of Colorado to independently test DNA from the case using new technology not available at the time of JonBenets death.
Unidentified DNA was found in JonBents underwear and touch DNA was discovered on the waistband of her long johns.
RELATED: JonBent Ramsey's Brother Tells Police 'It's Time To Talk' As DNA Evidence Revives Hope Of Solving Her Murder
KDVR reported that as of December 2021, the Boulder Police Department said they processed more than 1,500 pieces of evidence related to the murder of JonBenet.
At that time, the Boulder Police Department said it was actively reviewing genetic DNA testing processes to see if those can be applied to this case moving forward, the outlet noted.
They also shared BPDs claim they have analyzed nearly 1,000 DNA samples in the case to date.
Among the DNA evidence in the case is evidence collected from the Ramsey home and from JonBenets body and belongings, as well as DNA samples collected from the family, family friends who came to the home on the day of JonBenets disappearance, friends they saw at the Christmas party the night before, and household employees.
ABC News reports that all members of the Ramsey family, as well as 200 other potential suspects, were excluded as the possible murderer in this case as a result of then-newly discovered touch DNA found on JonBenet's long johns.
The touch DNA was traced to an unknown male, the male also responsible for DNA found in two spots of blood found in the 6-year-olds underwear.
The testing John has in mind is investigative genetic genealogy (IGG) research. According to the Oxford Sciences Journal of Law and the Biosciences, the technique involves uploading a crime scene DNA profile to one or more genetic genealogy databases with the intention of identifying a criminal offenders genetic relatives and, eventually, locating the offender within the family tree.
RELATED: 6 Secret Details About The JonBent Ramsey Case 25 Years Later
The technique was famously employed in capturing the Golden State Killer in 2018 after four decades. John believes the case can deliver a breakthrough in JonBenets case 25 years in the making.
The Boulder Police Department released a statement in response to Johns public pleas.
The Boulder Police Department is aware of the recent request involving the homicide investigation of JonBenet Ramsey and wants the community to know that it has never wavered in its pursuit to bring justice to everyone affected by the murder of this little girl, the statement begins.BPD note that detectives have followed up on every lead that has come into the department, to include more than 21,016 tips, letters and emails and traveling to 19 states to interview or speak with more than 1,000 individuals in connection to this crime.
As recently as March 2022, the Boulder Police Department hosted another meeting with federal, state, and local agencies working on this case and in consultation with DNA experts from around the country, they continued, adding. That collaboration will continue.
John is prepared to take legal action against the state of Colorado if the cases designation is not changed to cold so that further investigations can take place, FOX News reports.
The bereaved father has also started a Change.org petition with over 23,000 signatures calling on Colorado Governor Jared Pollis to allow DNA evidence to be released by the Boulder Police Department to an independent agency for testing.
JonBenets parents, John and late wife Patricia Ramsey, put JonBenet and older brother Burke to bed on Christmas Eve 1996 after attending a party at a neighbors home. The following morning, Patricia called 911 frantically after finding a ransom note demanding $118,000 the amount of Johns annual bonus in exchange for their daughter.
Boulder Police responded to the call and began working their investigation at the Ramseys home.
In a sweep of the home hours later, John found his daughters body in a back room of the basement of their home. Her mouth was duct taped shut, and she was wrapped in a blanket.
An autopsy would reveal that JonBenet died of strangulation and an 8.5-inch skull fracture.
RELATED: Inside The Conspiracy Theory That Katy Perry And JonBenet Ramsey Are Actually The Same Person
Angela Andaloro is a writer who passionately explores all things entertainment, parenting, and true crime. Follow her on Twitter here.
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What New DNA Testing Could Reveal About The Murder Of JonBent Ramsey 26 Years Later - YourTango
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Improving on-treatment risk stratification of cancer patients with refined response classification and integration of circulating tumor DNA kinetics -…
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Patient cohort, clinical characteristics, and recurrence patterns
We investigated 821 patients with advanced-stage EBV-associated NPC enrolled between 2009 and 2015, who consistently received cisplatin-based NAC followed by CRT. The diagram of the study population is shown in Fig. 1. The baseline clinical characteristics are presented in Table 1. Blood samples were collected at baseline and after the completion of NAC (post-NAC) and CRT (post-CRT). On-treatment imaging evaluation was conducted post-NAC using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The collection schema of cfEBV DNA and MRI is presented in Additional file 1: Fig. S1. The median follow-up was 64.9 months (interquartile range [IQR]: 58.172.5 months). We recorded 109 locoregional recurrences, 143 distant metastases, and 28 synchronous locoregional and metastatic recurrences. The 5-year rates of disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival (OS), distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS), and locoregional relapse-free survival (LRFS) were 72.5%, 82.9%, 83.1%, and 87.1%, respectively.
Flowchart showing the study design and patient selection process. The medical records of 10,126 patients with non-metastatic NPC were screened, and 821 patients with LA-NPC who received NAC plus concurrent CRT and had detectable pretreatment cfEBV DNA with on-treatment circulating cfEBV DNA surveillance were selected stepwise. Abbreviations: AC, adjuvant chemotherapy; CCRT, concurrent chemotherapy; cfEBV DNA, cell-free Epstein-Barr virus DNA; IC, induction chemotherapy; LA-NPC, locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging
All patients (n = 821) had detectable cfEBV DNA at baseline. The distribution of pretreatment cfEBV DNA titers (median, 12.50 103 copies/mL; IQR, 2.9652.50 103 copies/mL) are shown in Additional file 1: Fig. S2A, with 661 (80.5%) patients having pretreatment cfEBV DNA higher than 2000 copies/mL. Correlation analyses revealed that pretreatment cfEBV DNA was positively associated with node (N) stage (P < 0.05, Wilcoxon test; Fig. 2A), but not tumor (T) stage, age, sex, and smoking status (P > 0.05). Additionally, in line with our previous observations [17], higher baseline cfEBV DNA load (cut-off value, 2000 copies/mL) was preferentially associated with worse survival outcomes, especially with the occurrence of distant metastasis (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.88, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.595.20, P < 0.01; Fig. 2B). It remained significant after correcting for clinically important covariates using the inverse probability weighting (IPW) algorithm (HRDMFS = 2.51; 95% CI = 1.464.32; P < 0.01; Additional file 2: Table S1), suggesting that in addition to their well-acknowledged reflection on tumor burden, higher pretreatment cfEBV DNA levels may also be related to tumoral biological features (i.e., sensitivity to treatment and/or tumor microenvironmental heterogeneity as were referred in previously published researches [18,19,20]). Comparisons of the baseline covariates in the unadjusted and IPW-adjusted cohorts are shown in Table 2, demonstrating that the IPW succeeded in generating balanced distributions of covariates across subgroups.
Biological responses to NAC and their correlations with radiological responses. A Comparison of pretreatment cfEBV DNA levels across N categories. B Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DMFS in patients with pretreatment cfEBV DNA 2000 copies/mL versus <2000 copies/mL. C Scatter plot showing circulating cfEBV DNA levels before treatment initiation, at NAC completion (post-NAC), and at CRT completion (post-CRT). D Changes in cfEBV DNA from baseline in patients with increased cfEBV DNA levels post-NAC (n = 33). E Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DMFS in patients with cBR post-NAC versus decreased/increased cfEBV DNA in patients with non-cBR. F RECIST groupings (columns) and cfEBV DNA biological responses (rows) of 821 patients with matched treatment-nave and post-NAC surveillance data. G Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients with cBR versus non-cBR post-NAC. H Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients achieving cBR at the end of CRT stratified by biological responses to NAC. Abbreviations: cBR, complete biological response; cfEBV DNA, cell-free Epstein-Barr virus DNA; CI, confidence interval; CR, complete response; CRT, chemoradiotherapy; DFS, disease-free survival; DMFS, distant metastasis-free survival; HR, hazard ratio; IC, induction chemotherapy; N, node; NAC, neoadjuvant chemotherapy; non-cBR, non-complete biological response; PD, progression disease; PR, partial responses; PreEBV, pretreatment cfEBV DNA; SD, stable disease
Upon the initiation of NAC, 586 patients (71.4%) achieved complete biological response (cBR; defined as undetectable cfEBV DNA) during the NAC phase (Fig. 2C); the distributions of post-NAC cfEBV DNA titers (median, 0 copies/mL; IQR, 00.20 103 copies/mL) are shown in Additional file 1: Fig. S2B. Among 235 patients with non-complete biological response post-NAC (non-cBR; defined as detectable cfEBV DNA; median, 1.55 103 copies/mL; IQR, 0.417.84 103 copies/mL), 33 (14.0%) had increased cfEBV DNA levels from baseline, which demonstrated worse prognosis (Fig. 2D, E).
Regarding the RECIST-based radiological assessment, 56 patients (6.8%) achieved complete response (CR), 648 (78.9%) patients achieved partial response (PR) during the NAC phase, 116 patients (14.1%) had SD post-NAC, and one patient had progressive disease (PD) after receiving three cycles of docetaxel plus cisplatin (TP) NAC. Survival analysis demonstrated that patients with radiological PR had significantly worse survival compared to those with CR (HRDFS = 2.40, 95% CI = 1.135.11, P = 0.019, Additional file 1: Fig. S2C), and patients with SD/PD demonstrated the worst survival outcome. Based on this finding, we classified radiological responses into 3 subgroups: CR, PR, and SD/PD. Notably, patients with tumor stage I-II (T1-2) and tumor stage III-IV (T3-4) did not show significant differences in CR and PR rates (T1-2: 8 [7.7%] CR vs. 96 [92.3%] PR; T3-4: 48 [8.0%] CR vs. 552 [92.0%] PR; P = 0.91). The possible explanation for the comparable distribution of CR/PR in T1-2 versus T3-4 was that only locally advanced NPC (LA-NPC) (stage III-IV) patients were included in this study, thus patients with T1-2 would have more advanced N stages.
Next, we explored the relationships between biological and radiological responses and identified that they were positively correlated, with ~95% CR patients and ~75% PR patients having their cfEBV DNA dropped to zero after NAC, respectively (P < 0.01; Fig. 2F, and Additional file 1: Fig. S2D). Intriguingly, we observed an inconsistency between the biological and radiological responses in a subset of patients: of 56 and 648 patients with radiological CR and PR (radiological response) after NAC, 3 (5.3%) and 160 (24.7%) patients had detectable post-NAC cfEBV DNA (non-cBR), respectively (Fig. 2F). Moreover, across 117 patients with SD/PD (radiological responses), about 45 patients (38.5%) achieved cBR after 24 cycles of chemotherapy (Fig. 2F). These results prompted us to hypothesize that therapeutic responses evaluated by MRI and ctDNA may reflect distinct aspects of tumor biology and sensitivity to systemic treatment.
To further understand the clinical implications of cfEBV DNA-based biological responses. We first examined the correlations between post-NAC cfEBV DNA and post-CRT ctDNA. A total of 690 (84.0%) patients with matched post-NAC and post-CRT cfEBV DNA tests were included in the analysis. Among these, 51 patients had detectable post-CRT cfEBV DNA (median, 0.81 103 copies/mL; IQR, 0.334.79 103 copies/mL). The results demonstrated that detectable post-NAC DNA had 83.6% prediction sensitivity for detectable post-CRT ctDNA (95% CI = 78.088.1%). The probabilities of detectable post-CRT cfEBV DNA were 14 of 464 (3.0%) and 37 of 226 (16.4%), respectively, for patients with and without cBR after NAC (P < 0.01, 2 test; Additional file 1: Fig. S3A), suggesting that early cfEBV DNA kinetics was an informative indicator of whole-course treatment responses.
Next, we sought to determine the predictive value of post-NAC cfEBV DNA in long-term prognosis. Survival analysis revealed that cBR post-NAC was strongly predictive of long-term prognosis (HRDFS = 3.28; 95% CI = 2.554.23; P < 0.01; Fig. 2G and Additional file 1: Fig. S3B) and was independent of other clinically relevant prognostic factors in the IPW-adjusted survival analysis (Table 3). Interestingly, we identified that post-NAC cfEBV DNA was most prominently associated with distant metastasis after adjusting for clinically significant covariates (HRcfEBV DNA = 3.45 vs. HRMRI = 1.71, Pboth < 0.05; Table 3). In contrast, although post-NAC cfEBV DNA was also an independent predictor for locoregional recurrence, radiological response exhibited higher HRLRFS compared to post-NAC cfEBV DNA, suggesting that radiological response was a more preferential predictor for locoregional recurrence (HRcfEBV DNA = 1.89 vs. HRMRI(PR vs. CR) = 2.70 & HRMRI(SD/PD vs. CR) = 5.57; Table 3). This observation echoed with the above presumption that MRI and ctDNA reflected distinct aspects of tumor biology and sensitivity to systemic treatment.
Furthermore, we found that patients with non-cBR post-NAC that finally achieved cBR at the end of the CRT still sustained worse prognoses compared to those with cBR post-NAC (HRDFS = 2.70; 95% CI = 2.003.64; P < 0.01; Fig. 2H), suggesting that early biological responses were informative and that delayed ctDNA response conferred unfavorable outcomes. Moreover, among 242 patients with disease progression events, detectable cfEBV DNA post-NAC encompassed over half (122/242) of all failures, while detectable post-CRT ctDNA encompassed only 18% (39/211) of all failures (P < 0.05). Together, these data indicated that unfavorable biological cfEBV DNA responses at early treatment course identified an at-risk subgroup that encompassed large proportions of long-term failures.
Given the above observations, we asked whether early ctDNA kinetics provided additional clinical utility beyond imaging response assessments. To answer this question, we first stratified patients according to their radiological response and investigated whether patients with RECIST CR or PR had an unfavorable prognosis when they had detectable post-NAC ctDNA. Interestingly, we identified that post-NAC cfEBV DNA further stratified PR subgroup, with non-cBR patients having significantly worse DFS (HRDFS = 3.17, 95% CI = 2.364.25, P < 0.01; Fig. 3A). Unfortunately, the survival outcomes for CR subgroup (non-cBR vs. cBR) were not depicted due to the limited sample size in CR+non-cBR subgroup (n = 3). In addition, across patients with RECIST SD/PD, patients who achieved cBR post-NAC had more favorable DFS compared with those who did not (HRDFS = 2.32; 95% CI = 1.284.20; P < 0.01; Fig. 3A).
Biological responses provide additional prognostic information to RECIST. A Top panel: Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients achieving RECIST PR stratified by biological responses to NAC. Bottom panel: Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients with RECIST PD/SD stratified by biological responses to NAC. B Top panel: Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients achieving cBR stratified by RECIST (CR vs. PR vs. SD/PD). Bottom panel: Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS in patients who did not achieve cBR stratified by RECIST (PR vs. SD/PD). C Kaplan-Meier survival plot of DFS, OS, DMFS, and LRFS across response phenotypes based on biological plus radiological responses to NAC. G1: cBR+CR, G2: non-cBR+CR, G3: cBR+PR, G4: non-cBR+PR; G5: cBR+SD/PD, and G6: non-cBR+SD/PD. Abbreviations: cBR, complete biological response; cfEBV DNA, cell-free Epstein-Barr virus DNA; CR, complete response; DFS, disease-free survival; DMFS, distant metastasis-free survival; HR, hazard ratio; LRFS, locoregional relapse-free survival; non-cBR, non-complete biological response; OS, overall survival; PD, progression disease; PR, partial responses; SD, stable disease
Next, we determined whether radiological responses can further stratify patients with or without cBR. We found that radiological response further stratified patients with cBR and that patients with SD/PD had significantly worse DFS compared to those with CR (HRDFS = 4.93; 95% CI = 2.2510.82; P = 0.02; Fig. 3B) and PR (HRDFS = 2.06; 95% CI = 1.522.78; P = 0.04), whereas the difference was not significant between CR versus PR (P > 0.05), possibly attributed to the limited events, given that cBR patients had superior prognosis compared to the overall cohort (Additional file 1: Fig. S2C). In addition, across the non-cBR subgroups, although patients with PR demonstrated better prognosis compared to those with SD/PD, the differences did not reach statistical significance for DFS (P > 0.05; Fig. 3B), suggesting that patients who did not successfully achieve biological response (non-cBR) would have equally inferior long-term tumor control regardless of radiological PR or SD/PD.
Based on the above observation, we further combined the radiological and biological response subgroups and yielded 6 response phenotypes: G1 (cBR+CR, n = 53, 6.5%), G2 (non-cBR+CR, n = 3, 0.4%), G3 (cBR+PR, n = 488, 59.4%), G4 (non-cBR+PR, n = 160, 19.5%); G5 (cBR+SD/PD, n = 45, 5.5%), and G6 (non-cBR+SD/PD, n = 72, 8.8%). Across diverse phenotypes, we next mainly focused our following analysis on phenotypes with contradictory biological and radiological response evaluations (G4 [non-cBR+PR] and G5 [cBR+SD/PD]). For G4, one important issue here was whether non-cBR was potentially confounded by false-positive cfEBV DNA tests. To address this point, we further compared their baseline characteristics with G3 (cBR+PR) and identified that patients with non-cBR+PR response phenotype tended to have higher clinical stages and baseline cfEBV DNA load (Additional file 2: Table S2). Interestingly, even adjusting for clinical covariates in multivariate analysis, patients with non-cBR+PR still had significantly worse prognosis in all endpoints compared to cBR+PR (Table 4), suggesting that detectable cfEBV DNA for patients with PR was clinically informative, rather than just confounded by false-positive tests. Analogously, to further address whether cBR was potentially confounded by false-negative cfEBV DNA tests for patients with SD/PD in G5, we further compared their baseline characteristics with G6 (non-cBR+SD/PD) and observed that they had lower pretreatment cfEBV DNA compared to G6 (Additional file 2: Table S3). Interestingly, after adjusting for clinically relevant covariates, patients with cBR+SD/PD (G5) still harbored significantly better prognosis in OS, DFS, and DMFS compared to non-cBR+SD/PD (G6) (Table 5). Notably, the differences in DMFS were most prominent (HRDMFS = 5.81, 95% CI = 2.0916.18, P < 0.01), whereas the difference in LRFS did not reach statistical significance (P > 0.05). These data indicated that undetectable cfEBV DNA for patients with SD/PD was clinically informative rather than just confounded by false-negative tests, especially in forecasting better distant control across patients with SD/PD, but not for local control. Collectively, we revealed that the contradictory biological and radiological responses bred additional valuable prognostic information.
Finally, we asked whether patients with biological cBR plus radiological SD/PD (G5) would have comparable survival with patients who achieved radiological PR plus biological non-cBR (G4). To our surprise, G5 had significantly more favorable long-term prognosis compared to G4, especially in the control of distant metastasis (Pall < 0.05; Fig. 3C).
Given the above findings that cfEBV DNA harbored critical biological information and that its on-treatment clearance kinetics identified preferentially at-risk populations beyond the traditional imaging evaluations, we presumed that inclusion of ctDNA testing would refine the risk estimates across patients with similar initial risks based on clinically relevant factors; moreover, as therapy is introduced, further risk stratification considering the on-treatment ctDNA measurement, radiological response, and therapeutic information would refine personalized dynamic risk estimates. To test this hypothesis, we established five risk prediction models incorporating clinically important factors with/without ctDNA and on-treatment parameters (Fig. 4A). The models were constructed based on Cox proportional hazard regression (CpH) model.
The combinations of biological and radiological responses refine risk groupings. A Bar plot showing the C-index and 95% CI for predicting the 5-year DFS by five models incorporating pretreatment risk factors with/without ctDNA and on-treatment parameters using the CpH method. B Nomogram for predicting the 3- and 5-year DFS, which integrated conventional pretreatment risk factors with pretreatment ctDNA, radiological and ctDNA-based response phenotypes, and therapeutic information. The total point values were independently calculated and then applied to the corresponding probability scale. C Calibration plots showing the actual risk probability by decile (y-axis) over the nomogram-predicted risk probability (x-axis). Abbreviations: cBR, complete biological response; cfEBV DNA, cell-free Epstein-Barr virus DNA; CR, complete response; DFS, disease-free survival; non-cBR, non-complete biological response; PD, progression disease; PR, partial responses; SD, stable disease
In the first model, three parameters (sex, age, clinical stage) established from prior literature or datasets were initially incorporated (Model-I: pretreatment clinical [Model-I_preCLI]). We determined the performance of the model for predicting 5-year DFS, a clinically relevant milestone and standard endpoint in cancer, and identified a bias-corrected Harrells concordance index (C-index) of 0.57. Importantly, the predictive accuracy of 5-year DFS significantly improved when pretreatment cfEBV DNA was incorporated (Model-II: pretreatment clinic-biological [Model-II_preCLIBIO]), with the C-index reaching 0.60. Next, we introduced treatment information and radiological/biological response parameters into the model (Model III-V). Model-III_postMRI, incorporating treatment information and radiological responses, had a significantly improved C-index of 0.65, and the C-index of Model IV (Model-IV_postctDNA), which incorporated treatment information and biological responses, was 0.68. Finally, given the above observation that on-treatment MRI and ctDNA reflected distinct aspects of tumor biology and sensitivity to systemic treatment, we established Model-V (Model-V_INTEGR), which integrated pretreatment factors with radiological and ctDNA-based response phenotypes, and therapeutic information. The C-index of Model-V reached 0.69.
Given that Model-V_INTEGR outperformed the models using pretreatment risk factors or on-treatment radiological assessments, we further developed a nomogram for quantifying the 3- and 5-year risks of disease progression in patients with diverse pretreatment and on-treatment features (Fig. 4B). The calibration plots indicated good agreement between the models predicted and observed survival estimates (Fig. 4C).
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Trauma in Your DNA: Educator of the Year Lecture – Psychiatric Times
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Can we inherit our parents trauma? Research points to yes.
CONFERENCE REPORTER
Real true, posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD] is going to have an impact, certainly on the next generation and maybe generations after that, said Rachel Yehuda, PhD.
Yehuda, in the Educator of the Year Lecture at the 2022 Annual Psychiatric Times World CME Conference in San Diego, shared her research on the potential of PTSD being passed genetically through the generations. Studying the Holocaust and 9/11 survivors showed fascinating results.
At a clinic for Holocaust survivors and their families at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, families reported feeling damaged, guilty, anxious, full of morbid grief, and had dysfunctional interpersonal relationships due to fear of loss. Overall, the children of survivors believed that parental Holocaust exposure was involved in their current mental health problems.
Previous research by Yehuda et al showed adult offspring of Holocaust survivors had differential effects of maternal and paternal PTSD in both glucocorticoid receptor sensitivity and vulnerability to psychiatric disorder. With both maternal and paternal PTSD, offspring had lower GR-1F promoter methylation; with just paternal PTSD, offspring had GR-1F promoter hypermethylation.1 Furthermore, Holocaust exposure induced intergenerational effects on FKBP5 methylation; specifically, Holocaust survivors and their adult children showed a nongenotype dependent change in methylation compared to their respective controls.2 This was the first demonstration of an association of preconception parental trauma with epigenetic alterations that is evident in both exposed parent and offspring.
Similar findings resulted from Yehudas work on the effects on 9/11. For example, in a post-9/11 program surveilling women who were pregnant, Yehuda and researchers collected salivary cortisol from mothers and babies.3 What we found is that the mothers that felt PTSD, their cortisol levels were lower, but its also lower in babies, which was really wild, said Yehuda. But heres the kicker: Both cortisol levels are lowest in the babies of mothers with PTSD who were exposed in the third trimester.
This research suggests maternal PTSD may confer additional in utero effects, causing more anxiety for example.3 Trauma exposure during pregnancy directly affects the fetus and fetus germ cells, Yehuda shared.3
How does trauma pass down? Yehuda explained that epigenetic changes could survive cell division associated with the formation of sperm and eggs; if the parent is exposed to trauma, their exposure could result in epigenetic changes that may affect their sperm or eggmeaning a single trauma could simultaneously affect multiple generations without direct exposure.
This is inherited in our DNA, said Yehuda. Trauma is inherited.
The biological remnants of parental experiences in our DNA can affect us in multiple ways, according to Yehuda. They can influence our response to stressors/challenges, make us better able to detect and respond to threats, increase vulnerability to mental health disorders, and increase our attunement to injustice. They are enduring, but not irreversible, Yehuda stressed.
References
1. Yehuda R, Daskalakis NP, Lehrner A, et al. Influences of maternal and paternal PTSD on epigenetic regulation of the glucocorticoid receptor gene in Holocaust survivor offspring. Am J Psychiatry. 2014;171(8):872-880.
2. Yehuda R, Daskalakis NP, Bierer LM, et al. Holocaust exposure induced intergenerational effects on FKBP5 methylation. Biol Psychiatry. 2016;80(5):372-380.
3. Yehuda R, Engel SM, Brand SR, et al. Transgenerational effects of posttraumatic stress disorder in babies of mothers exposed to the World Trade Center attacks during pregnancy. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005;90(7):4115-4118.
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Trauma in Your DNA: Educator of the Year Lecture - Psychiatric Times
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