27 results on '"S. Claassen"'
Search Results
2. Inhibition of the cholesterol transporter ABCA1 by probucol decreases capacitation and tyrosine phosphorylation of dog spermatozoa, and is dose dependent
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S. Schäfer-Somi, S. Claaßen, and D. Lechner
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Male ,Equine ,Acrosome Reaction ,Spermatozoa ,Dogs ,Probucol ,Cholesterol ,Food Animals ,Semen ,Sperm Motility ,Animals ,Tyrosine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Phosphorylation ,Small Animals ,Sperm Capacitation - Abstract
The ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter molecule ABCA1 participates in the cholesterol transport within and through cell membranes. We recently demonstrated that in dog spermatozoa, capacitation could be decreased with probucol (PRO), an ABCA1 specific antagonist. In this study, a dose-effect relationship of PRO on dog sperm capacitation, tyrosine phosphorylation and cholesterol efflux from the sperm plasma membrane was investigated. A total of 16 ejaculates from dogs of different breeds, aged 2-4 years were used. Sperm motility and membrane integrity in the main fraction was determined by CASA. Samples were stained with a boron dipyrromethene difluoride (BODIPY) fluorophore (P9672, Sigma- Aldrich, A) diluted in DMSO at a final concentration of 0.4 μM. All samples were divided into 5 aliquots, with 0, 100, 250, 500 and 1000 μM of PRO. After incubation at 37 °C for 2 h, PI was added and flow cytometry performed. All aliquots were examined for capacitation and acrosome reaction by using the CTC assay and tyrosine phosphorylation (TP). Membrane integrity was measured in all aliquots to investigate the effect of PRO on cell membranes. Membrane integrity did not differ between controls (0 μM), and 100, 250 and 500 μM PRO, but decreased with 1000 μM PRO (p 0.05). Increasing PRO concentration decreased the percentage alive cells with cholesterol efflux per PRO group (0 μM: 77.8 ± 10.6%, 100 μM: 63.7 ± 11.7%, 250 μM: 52.1 ± 12.9%, 500 μM: 37.7 ± 11.6%, 1000 μM: 33.1 ± 14.4%; p 0.05), decreased head and entire tail phosphorylated cells (0 μM: 34.6%, 1000 μM: 5.1% p 0.05); and decreased the percentage capacitated cells (maximum with PRO 500 μM: capacitated vs. control: 54.2 ± 17% vs 25 ± 7.7%, p 0.05). Conclusion: PRO decreased the cholesterol efflux, and decreased tyrosine phosphorylation and capacitation in a dose-dependent manner. This suggests a strong involvement of the ABCA1 transporter in different functional aspects of sperm capacitation in dogs.
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- 2023
3. Engaging youth and parents in clinical pediatric research: A case-based example
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Elise G Martin, Jananee Rasiah, Curtis S Claassen, Jennifer Waywitka, Anne M Merritt, Tamara M Pringsheim, Kathleen A Shearer, Vivian W L Tsang, Katherine E Stevens, Cole E Sheehan-Klassen, Perle Suddaby, and Serena L Orr
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Background Youth and parent engagement is a key component of clinical research. There are many ways to actively and meaningfully engage youth and parents as integral members of research teams, for example, through ad-hoc committees, advisory councils, or as co-leads on projects. When youth and parents are actively and meaningfully engaged in research projects, they share knowledge from their lived experiences to improve the quality and relevance of research. Methods We describe a case-based example of engaging youth and parent research partners when co-designing a questionnaire to assess preferences for pediatric headache treatments, from both a researcher and youth/parent perspective. We also summarize best practices in patient and family engagement from the literature and pertinent guidelines to assist researchers with integrating patient and family engagement into their studies. Results As researchers, we felt that the integration of a youth and parent engagement plan into our study significantly altered and strengthened questionnaire content validity. We encountered challenges throughout the process and detailed these experiences to help educate others about challenge mitigation and best practices in youth and parent engagement. As youth and parent partners, we felt that engaging in the process of questionnaire development was an exciting and empowering opportunity, and that our feedback was valued and integrated. Conclusions By sharing our experience, we hope to catalyze thought and discussion around the importance of youth and parent engagement in pediatric research, with the goal of stimulating more appropriate, relevant, and high-quality pediatric research and clinical care in the future.
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- 2023
4. Creation and implementation of an electronic health record note for quality improvement in pediatric epilepsy: Practical considerations and lessons learned
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David Czank, Aleksandra Mineyko, Luis Bello Espinosa, Alice W. Ho, Stafford Dean, Curtis S Claassen, Julia Jacobs, Morris H. Scantlebury, Brett A. Simms, Joka McMahon, Jeffrey Buchhalter, Maarit Mackay, Gary Ruta, Juan Pablo Appendino, Sabrina D'Alfonso, Brian L. Brooks, Kim Smyth, Tammy Still, Trina Roberts, Sonia Rothenmund, Jong M. Rho, Nancy Thornton, Jane Corbeil, and Tyson Sawchuk
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,EHR ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Documentation ,Clinical decision support system ,quality improvement ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,informatics ,Quality (business) ,Prospective Studies ,Facilitated communication ,Child ,Baseline (configuration management) ,RC346-429 ,media_common ,QI ,Emergency department ,electronic health record ,Neurology ,Informatics ,Family medicine ,Full‐length Original Research ,epilepsy ,Original Article ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Psychology - Abstract
Author(s): Buchhalter, Jeffrey R; Scantlebury, Morris H; D'Alfonso, Sabrina; Pablo Appendino, Juan; Bello Espinosa, Luis; Brooks, Brian L; Claassen, Curtis; Corbeil, Jane; Czank, David; Dean, Stafford; Ho, Alice W; Jacobs, Julia; Mackay, Maarit; McMahon, Joka; Mineyko, Aleksandra; Rho, Jong M; Roberts, Trina; Rothenmund, Sonia; Ruta, Gary; Sawchuk, Tyson; Simms, Brett A; Smyth, Kim; Still, Tammy; Thornton, Nancy | Abstract: ObjectiveTo describe the development of the Pediatric Epilepsy Outcome-Informatics Project (PEOIP) at Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH), which was created to provide standardized, point-of-care data entry; near-time data analysis; and availability of outcome dashboards as a baseline on which to pursue quality improvement.MethodsStakeholders involved in the PEOIP met weekly to determine the most important outcomes for patients diagnosed with epilepsy, create a standardized electronic note with defined fields (patient demographics, seizure and syndrome type and frequency and specific outcomes- seizure type and frequency, adverse effects, emergency department visits, hospitalization, and care pathways for clinical decision support. These were embedded in the electronic health record from which the fields were extracted into a data display platform that provided patient- and population-level dashboards updated every 36nhours. Provider satisfaction and family experience surveys were performed to assess the impact of the standardized electronic note.ResultsIn the last 5nyears, 3,245 unique patients involving 13, 831 encounters had prospective, longitudinal, standardized epilepsy data accrued via point-of-care data entry into an electronic note as part of routine clinical care. A provider satisfaction survey of the small number of users involved indicated that the vast majority believed that the note makes documentation more efficient. A family experience survey indicated that being provided with the note was considered "valuable" or "really valuable" by 86% of respondents and facilitated communication with family members, school, and advocacy organizations.SignificanceThe PEOIP serves as a proof of principle that information obtained as part of routine clinical care can be collected in a prospective, standardized, efficient manner and be used to construct filterable process/outcome dashboards, updated in near time (36nhours). This information will provide the necessary baseline data on which multiple of QI projects to improve meaningful outcomes for children with epilepsy will be based.
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- 2021
5. New insights into the genetic etiology of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias
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Bellenguez, C. Küçükali, F. Jansen, I.E. Kleineidam, L. Moreno-Grau, S. Amin, N. Naj, A.C. Campos-Martin, R. Grenier-Boley, B. Andrade, V. Holmans, P.A. Boland, A. Damotte, V. van der Lee, S.J. Costa, M.R. Kuulasmaa, T. Yang, Q. de Rojas, I. Bis, J.C. Yaqub, A. Prokic, I. Chapuis, J. Ahmad, S. Giedraitis, V. Aarsland, D. Garcia-Gonzalez, P. Abdelnour, C. Alarcón-Martín, E. Alcolea, D. Alegret, M. Alvarez, I. Álvarez, V. Armstrong, N.J. Tsolaki, A. Antúnez, C. Appollonio, I. Arcaro, M. Archetti, S. Pastor, A.A. Arosio, B. Athanasiu, L. Bailly, H. Banaj, N. Baquero, M. Barral, S. Beiser, A. Pastor, A.B. Below, J.E. Benchek, P. Benussi, L. Berr, C. Besse, C. Bessi, V. Binetti, G. Bizarro, A. Blesa, R. Boada, M. Boerwinkle, E. Borroni, B. Boschi, S. Bossù, P. Bråthen, G. Bressler, J. Bresner, C. Brodaty, H. Brookes, K.J. Brusco, L.I. Buiza-Rueda, D. Bûrger, K. Burholt, V. Bush, W.S. Calero, M. Cantwell, L.B. Chene, G. Chung, J. Cuccaro, M.L. Carracedo, Á. Cecchetti, R. Cervera-Carles, L. Charbonnier, C. Chen, H.-H. Chillotti, C. Ciccone, S. Claassen, J.A.H.R. Clark, C. Conti, E. Corma-Gómez, A. Costantini, E. Custodero, C. Daian, D. Dalmasso, M.C. Daniele, A. Dardiotis, E. Dartigues, J.-F. de Deyn, P.P. de Paiva Lopes, K. de Witte, L.D. Debette, S. Deckert, J. Del Ser, T. Denning, N. DeStefano, A. Dichgans, M. Diehl-Schmid, J. Diez-Fairen, M. Rossi, P.D. Djurovic, S. Duron, E. Düzel, E. Dufouil, C. Eiriksdottir, G. Engelborghs, S. Escott-Price, V. Espinosa, A. Ewers, M. Faber, K.M. Fabrizio, T. Nielsen, S.F. Fardo, D.W. Farotti, L. Fenoglio, C. Fernández-Fuertes, M. Ferrari, R. Ferreira, C.B. Ferri, E. Fin, B. Fischer, P. Fladby, T. Fließbach, K. Fongang, B. Fornage, M. Fortea, J. Foroud, T.M. Fostinelli, S. Fox, N.C. Franco-Macías, E. Bullido, M.J. Frank-García, A. Froelich, L. Fulton-Howard, B. Galimberti, D. García-Alberca, J.M. García-González, P. Garcia-Madrona, S. Garcia-Ribas, G. Ghidoni, R. Giegling, I. Giorgio, G. Goate, A.M. Goldhardt, O. Gomez-Fonseca, D. González-Pérez, A. Graff, C. Grande, G. Green, E. Grimmer, T. Grünblatt, E. Grunin, M. Gudnason, V. Guetta-Baranes, T. Haapasalo, A. Hadjigeorgiou, G. Haines, J.L. Hamilton-Nelson, K.L. Hampel, H. Hanon, O. Hardy, J. Hartmann, A.M. Hausner, L. Harwood, J. Heilmann-Heimbach, S. Helisalmi, S. Heneka, M.T. Hernández, I. Herrmann, M.J. Hoffmann, P. Holmes, C. Holstege, H. Vilas, R.H. Hulsman, M. Humphrey, J. Biessels, G.J. Jian, X. Johansson, C. Jun, G.R. Kastumata, Y. Kauwe, J. Kehoe, P.G. Kilander, L. Ståhlbom, A.K. Kivipelto, M. Koivisto, A. Kornhuber, J. Kosmidis, M.H. Kukull, W.A. Kuksa, P.P. Kunkle, B.W. Kuzma, A.B. Lage, C. Laukka, E.J. Launer, L. Lauria, A. Lee, C.-Y. Lehtisalo, J. Lerch, O. Lleó, A. Longstreth, W., Jr Lopez, O. de Munain, A.L. Love, S. Löwemark, M. Luckcuck, L. Lunetta, K.L. Ma, Y. Macías, J. MacLeod, C.A. Maier, W. Mangialasche, F. Spallazzi, M. Marquié, M. Marshall, R. Martin, E.R. Montes, A.M. Rodríguez, C.M. Masullo, C. Mayeux, R. Mead, S. Mecocci, P. Medina, M. Meggy, A. Mehrabian, S. Mendoza, S. Menéndez-González, M. Mir, P. Moebus, S. Mol, M. Molina-Porcel, L. Montrreal, L. Morelli, L. Moreno, F. Morgan, K. Mosley, T. Nöthen, M.M. Muchnik, C. Mukherjee, S. Nacmias, B. Ngandu, T. Nicolas, G. Nordestgaard, B.G. Olaso, R. Orellana, A. Orsini, M. Ortega, G. Padovani, A. Paolo, C. Papenberg, G. Parnetti, L. Pasquier, F. Pastor, P. Peloso, G. Pérez-Cordón, A. Pérez-Tur, J. Pericard, P. Peters, O. Pijnenburg, Y.A.L. Pineda, J.A. Piñol-Ripoll, G. Pisanu, C. Polak, T. Popp, J. Posthuma, D. Priller, J. Puerta, R. Quenez, O. Quintela, I. Thomassen, J.Q. Rábano, A. Rainero, I. Rajabli, F. Ramakers, I. Real, L.M. Reinders, M.J.T. Reitz, C. Reyes-Dumeyer, D. Ridge, P. Riedel-Heller, S. Riederer, P. Roberto, N. Rodriguez-Rodriguez, E. Rongve, A. Allende, I.R. Rosende-Roca, M. Royo, J.L. Rubino, E. Rujescu, D. Sáez, M.E. Sakka, P. Saltvedt, I. Sanabria, Á. Sánchez-Arjona, M.B. Sanchez-Garcia, F. Juan, P.S. Sánchez-Valle, R. Sando, S.B. Sarnowski, C. Satizabal, C.L. Scamosci, M. Scarmeas, N. Scarpini, E. Scheltens, P. Scherbaum, N. Scherer, M. Schmid, M. Schneider, A. Schott, J.M. Selbæk, G. Seripa, D. Serrano, M. Sha, J. Shadrin, A.A. Skrobot, O. Slifer, S. Snijders, G.J.L. Soininen, H. Solfrizzi, V. Solomon, A. Song, Y. Sorbi, S. Sotolongo-Grau, O. Spalletta, G. Spottke, A. Squassina, A. Stordal, E. Tartan, J.P. Tárraga, L. Tesí, N. Thalamuthu, A. Thomas, T. Tosto, G. Traykov, L. Tremolizzo, L. Tybjærg-Hansen, A. Uitterlinden, A. Ullgren, A. Ulstein, I. Valero, S. Valladares, O. Broeckhoven, C.V. Vance, J. Vardarajan, B.N. van der Lugt, A. Dongen, J.V. van Rooij, J. van Swieten, J. Vandenberghe, R. Verhey, F. Vidal, J.-S. Vogelgsang, J. Vyhnalek, M. Wagner, M. Wallon, D. Wang, L.-S. Wang, R. Weinhold, L. Wiltfang, J. Windle, G. Woods, B. Yannakoulia, M. Zare, H. Zhao, Y. Zhang, X. Zhu, C. Zulaica, M. Farrer, L.A. Psaty, B.M. Ghanbari, M. Raj, T. Sachdev, P. Mather, K. Jessen, F. Ikram, M.A. de Mendonça, A. Hort, J. Tsolaki, M. Pericak-Vance, M.A. Amouyel, P. Williams, J. Frikke-Schmidt, R. Clarimon, J. Deleuze, J.-F. Rossi, G. Seshadri, S. Andreassen, O.A. Ingelsson, M. Hiltunen, M. Sleegers, K. Schellenberg, G.D. van Duijn, C.M. Sims, R. van der Flier, W.M. Ruiz, A. Ramirez, A. Lambert, J.-C. EADB GR@ACE DEGESCO EADI GERAD Demgene FinnGen ADGC CHARGE
- Abstract
Characterization of the genetic landscape of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias (ADD) provides a unique opportunity for a better understanding of the associated pathophysiological processes. We performed a two-stage genome-wide association study totaling 111,326 clinically diagnosed/'proxy' AD cases and 677,663 controls. We found 75 risk loci, of which 42 were new at the time of analysis. Pathway enrichment analyses confirmed the involvement of amyloid/tau pathways and highlighted microglia implication. Gene prioritization in the new loci identified 31 genes that were suggestive of new genetically associated processes, including the tumor necrosis factor alpha pathway through the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex. We also built a new genetic risk score associated with the risk of future AD/dementia or progression from mild cognitive impairment to AD/dementia. The improvement in prediction led to a 1.6- to 1.9-fold increase in AD risk from the lowest to the highest decile, in addition to effects of age and the APOE ε4 allele. © 2022. The Author(s).
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- 2022
6. Position Statement on the Use of Medical Cannabis for the Treatment of Epilepsy in Canada
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Bláthnaid McCoy, Manouchehr Javidan, Marcus C Ng, Jorge G Burneo, O Carter Snead, Deirdre Floyd, Laura L Jurasek, Jong M. Rho, Dang Khoa Nguyen, Maria Zak, Mary B. Connolly, Laura Wang, Juan Pablo Appendino, Richard S. McLachlan, Paula M Brna, Richard James Huntsman, Curtis S Claassen, Jonathan C Lau, Aylin Y. Reid, Mark R Keezer, Cyrus Boelman, Nathalie Jette, Michael V T De Guzman, Paolo Federico, and Jose F. Tellez-Zenteno
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Position statement ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Medical treatment ,General Medicine ,League ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Public interest ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alliance ,Neurology ,Family medicine ,Medical cannabis ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cannabis ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In Canada, recreational use of cannabis was legalized in October 2018. This policy change along with recent publications evaluating the efficacy of cannabis for the medical treatment of epilepsy and media awareness about its use have increased the public interest about this agent. The Canadian League Against Epilepsy Medical Therapeutics Committee, along with a multidisciplinary group of experts and Canadian Epilepsy Alliance representatives, has developed a position statement about the use of medical cannabis for epilepsy. This article addresses the current Canadian legal framework, recent publications about its efficacy and safety profile, and our understanding of the clinical issues that should be considered when contemplating cannabis use for medical purposes.
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- 2019
7. Training breast care nurses throughout Europe: The EONS postbasic curriculum for breast cancer nursing
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Deborah Fenlon, Yvonne Wengström, Ilana. Kadmon, S. Claassen, Emma Pennery, Manuela Eicher, and Sara Marquard
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Cancer Research ,business.industry ,Oncology Nursing ,Breast Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Europe ,Oncology nursing ,Education, Nursing, Continuing ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,Nursing ,Societies, Nursing ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Nursing science ,Curriculum ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business - Abstract
The European Parliamentary Group on Breast Cancer and the European Society of Breast Cancer Specialists state that there is a need for EU agreed guidelines on breast care nursing and training. Therefore the European Oncology Nursing Society (EONS) commissioned the development of a post-basic curriculum for breast cancer nursing.The goal was to define a European curriculum for the training of breast care nurses.The curriculum was developed using a variety of sources, including guidelines from a number of European and other countries world wide, relevant literature and input from an expert panel of senior European nurses with expertise in breast care nursing.An English language, European curriculum of breast care nursing was developed at a postbasic level to provide guidance for the training of breast care nurses throughout Europe. Definitions for breast care nurse roles and activities and levels of practice, as well as indicative content are provided.The training of nurses in breast cancer care should be mandatory and common practice for European countries. To enhance comparability and standard development, the indicative content should be applied in all future post-basic education.
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- 2012
8. The requirements of a specialist Breast Centre
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Thomas Decker, Yvonne Wengström, C. J. van Asperen, Robert E. Mansel, Simonetta Bianchi, E.J.Th. Rutgers, Clive A. Wells, Roberto Orecchia, A. Goldhirsch, Laura Biganzoli, Alfonso Frigerio, M. Rosselli Del Turco, Luigi Cataliotti, E. G. Gustafsson, Antonio Ponti, Peter Regitnig, Lorenza Marotti, A.R.M. Wilson, S. Claassen, and Philip Poortmans
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Cancer Research ,Palliative care ,Evidence-based practice ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Quality indicator ,Performance ,Breast Neoplasms ,Audit ,Certification ,Data collection audit ,Cancer Care Facilities ,Accreditation ,Nursing ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Patient-Centered Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Early Detection of Cancer ,media_common ,Service (business) ,Patient Care Team ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Data collection ,business.industry ,Breast specialist ,Communication ,Quality of care ,Breast Centre ,Oncology ,Eusoma ,Breast cancer care ,Education, Medical, Continuing ,Female ,Interdisciplinary Communication ,business - Abstract
Introduction: In recognition of the advances and evidence based changes in clinical practice that have occurred in recent years and taking into account the knowledge and experience accumulated through the voluntary breast unit certification programme, Eusoma has produced this up-dated and revised guidelines on the requirements of a Specialist Breast Centre (BC). Methods: The content of these guidelines is based on evidence from the recent relevant peer reviewed literature and the consensus of a multidisciplinary team of European experts. The guidelines define the requirements for each breast service and for the specialists who work in specialist Breast Centres. Results: The guidelines identify the minimum requirements needed to set up a BC, these being an integrated Breast Centre, dealing with a sufficient number of cases to allow effective working and continuing expertise, dedicated specialists working with a multidisciplinary approach, providing all services throughout the patients pathway and data collection and audit. It is essential that the BC also guarantees the continuity of care for patients with advanced (metastatic) disease offering treatments according to multidisciplinary competencies and a high quality palliative care service. The BC must ensure that comprehensive support and expertise may be needed, not only through the core BC team, but also ensure that all other medical and paramedical expertise that may be necessary depending on the individual case are freely available, referring the patient to the specific care provider depending on the problem. Conclusions: Applying minimum requirements and quality indicators is essential to improve organisation, performance and outcome in breast care. Efficacy and compliance have to be constantly monitored to evaluate the quality of patient care and to allow appropriate corrective actions leading to improvements in patient care. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2013
9. 4204 The development of a European breast care nursing post basic curriculum
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Sara Marquard, Emma Pennery, S. Claassen, Deborah Fenlon, Manuela Eicher, Ilana. Kadmon, and Yvonne Wengström
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Cancer Research ,Medical education ,Team nursing ,Oncology ,Nursing ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Medicine ,Nursing science ,Nurse education ,business ,Curriculum - Published
- 2009
10. 8072 INVITED The role of the breast care nurse
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S. Claassen
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Nursing ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2007
11. Follow-up for patients with breast cancer — who benefits? The nurses' view
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H.J.T. Rutten, Y. Van Riet, F. Jansen, Nieuwenhuijzen, A. Wigman, and S. Claassen
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast cancer ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2006
12. Research Training for the Engineer
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R. S. Claassen
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Engineering ,Government ,Plea ,business.industry ,Aquatic and environmental engineering ,Engineering ethics ,Engineering curricula ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Engineering research ,Training (civil) ,Education - Abstract
Industrial and government laboratories require much engineering research for which Ph.D. level training in engineering is fully appropriate, but many engineers trained at that level do not want to do engineering. This mismatch between employee and employer is generated on campus. Following World War II, engineering curricula have been revised to provide heavy emphasis in science, for example, physics. Many physicists have been recruited to engineering faculties. The means to better engineering has been mistaken for the end goal with the result that students have been motivated toward physics. Since a clearer definition or objective for the doctoral engineer might reduce the problem, descriptions are given to distinguish the character of the work done by physicists and engineers trained at the doctoral level. The crucial difference is in motivation; the physicist wants to learn more, the engineer seeks a result. A plea is made to train and motivate engineering students toward engineering research.
- Published
- 1965
13. An Annotated Check-List of the More Important Entomological Periodicals1
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Evelyn S. Claassen
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Information retrieval ,Insect Science ,Biology ,Check List - Published
- 1945
14. Materials for advanced energy technologies
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Richard S. Claassen
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Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Photovoltaic system ,Energy transformation ,Environmental science ,Coal ,Energy consumption ,Process engineering ,business ,Coal liquefaction ,Energy source ,Solar energy ,Renewable energy - Abstract
The recovery and processing of industrial materials required about 16 percent of the total U.S. energy consumption in 1974. The interdependence of energy and materials has been increasing and will continue to increase as the more easily won raw materials are exhausted and as the energy conversion and utilization schemes become more sophisticated. The author stresses the materials technology that will be required in major developing systems for extracting, converting, distributing, and using energy--emphasizing that development of suitable materials often takes many years. A detailed schematic is shown that represents the energy sources; methods of processing, conversion, transmission, and storage; and forms of fuel energy that may exist in the near term, up to about 1990. The schematic indicates that uranium, gas, coal, and oil will probably still contribute more than 95 percent of the total energy flow in 1990. For the near term, coal liquefaction, coal gasification, water-moderated reactors, municipal waste, high-temperature turbines, and geothermal will contribute up to 5 percent. For the midterm, 1990 to 2005, fast breeder reactors, photovoltaic conversion of solar energy to electricity, MHD, and flywheels should contribute significantly. The projections for controlled fusion in the year 2005 and beyond are summarized. The magnitude ofmore » the problem involves sustained effort from universities, industrial organizations, and government laboratories, guided by close interplay with energy system designers. (MCW)« less
- Published
- 1976
15. Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae among hospitalized patients in Cape Town, South Africa: molecular epidemiology and characterization.
- Author
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Marais G, Moodley C, Claassen-Weitz S, Patel F, Prentice E, Tootla H, Nyakutira N, Lennard K, Reddy K, Bamford C, Niehaus A, Whitelaw A, and Brink A
- Abstract
Background: The molecular epidemiology of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales in Cape Town remains largely unknown., Objectives: This study aimed to describe the molecular epidemiology, resistome, virulome and mobilome of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) within Cape Town to guide therapy, antimicrobial stewardship and infection prevention and control practices., Methods: Eighty-five CRKP isolates from hospitalized patients underwent WGS as part of a prospective, multicentre, cross-sectional study, conducted between 1 November 2020 and 30 November 2022, across public-sector and private-sector hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa., Results: MLST revealed three novel types, ST6785, ST6786 and ST6787, while the most common were ST219, ST307, ST17, ST13 and ST2497. Different predominant clones were noted in each hospital. The most common carbapenemase gene was bla
OXA-48-like , detected in 71% of isolates, with blaNDM detected in 5%. Notably, co-detection of two carbapenemase genes ( blaOXA-48-like and blaNDM ) occurred in 13% of isolates. The yersiniabactin siderophore was detected in 73% of isolates, and was most commonly associated with the ICE Kp 5 mobile element. All carbapenemases were located on plasmids. The genes blaOXA-181 and blaOXA-232 colocalized with a ColKP3 replicon type on assembled contigs in 83% and 100% of cases, respectively., Conclusions: CRKP epidemiology in Cape Town reflects institutionally dominant, rather than regional, clones. The most prevalent carbapenemase gene was blaOXA-48-like , in keeping with CRKP epidemiology in South Africa in general. Emerging clones harbouring both blaOXA-48-like and blaNDM , such as ST17, ST2497 and the novel ST6787, are a concern due to the limited availability of appropriate antimicrobial agents in South Africa., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Genital tract infections, the vaginal microbiome and gestational age at birth among pregnant women in South Africa: a cohort study protocol.
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Gigi RMS, Mdingi MM, Jung H, Claassen-Weitz S, Bütikofer L, Klausner JD, Muzny CA, Taylor CM, van de Wijgert JHHM, Peters RPH, and Low N
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- Child, Female, Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Child, Preschool, Pregnant Women, Cohort Studies, Gestational Age, South Africa epidemiology, Pregnancy Outcome, Chlamydia trachomatis, Premature Birth epidemiology, HIV Infections complications, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious, Reproductive Tract Infections epidemiology, Mycoplasma Infections
- Abstract
Introduction: Preterm birth complications are the most common cause of death in children under 5 years. The presence of multiple microorganisms and genital tract inflammation could be the common mechanism driving early onset of labour. South Africa has high levels of preterm birth, genital tract infections and HIV infection among pregnant women. We plan to investigate associations between the presence of multiple lower genital tract microorganisms in pregnancy and gestational age at birth., Methods and Analysis: This cohort study enrols around 600 pregnant women at one public healthcare facility in East London, South Africa. Eligible women are ≥18 years and at <27 weeks of gestation, confirmed by ultrasound. At enrolment and 30-34 weeks of pregnancy, participants receive on-site tests for Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae , with treatment if test results are positive. At these visits, additional vaginal specimens are taken for: PCR detection and quantification of Trichomonas vaginalis , Candida spp., Mycoplasma genitalium, M. hominis , Ureaplasma urealyticum and U. parvum ; microscopy and Nugent scoring; and for 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing and quantification. Pregnancy outcomes are collected from a postnatal visit and birth registers. The primary outcome is gestational age at birth. Statistical analyses will explore associations between specific microorganisms and gestational age at birth. To explore the association with the quantity of microorganisms, we will construct an index of microorganism load and use mixed-effects regression models and classification and regression tree analysis to examine which combinations of microorganisms contribute to earlier gestational age at birth., Ethics and Dissemination: This protocol has approvals from the University of Cape Town Research Ethics Committee and the Canton of Bern Ethics Committee. Results from this study will be uploaded to preprint servers, submitted to open access peer-reviewed journals and presented at regional and international conferences., Trial Registration Number: NCT06131749; Pre-results., Competing Interests: Competing interests: CAM has received research grant funding to her institution by Gilead, Abbott Molecular, Visby and Lupin Pharmaceuticals. She is a consultant to BioNTech, Cepheid and BioFire Diagnostics. She has received honoraria for educational presentations and review activities from Scynexis, Visby, Abbott, Elsevier, UpToDate and DynaMed Plus., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. Succession and determinants of the early life nasopharyngeal microbiota in a South African birth cohort.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Gardner-Lubbe S, Xia Y, Mwaikono KS, Mounaud SH, Nierman WC, Workman L, Zar HJ, and Nicol MP
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- Infant, Child, Humans, Infant, Newborn, South Africa, Birth Cohort, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Nasopharynx microbiology, Bacteria genetics, Moraxella genetics, Corynebacterium genetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Microbiota genetics, HIV Infections drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Bacteria colonizing the nasopharynx play a key role as gatekeepers of respiratory health. Yet, dynamics of early life nasopharyngeal (NP) bacterial profiles remain understudied in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where children have a high prevalence of risk factors for lower respiratory tract infection. We investigated longitudinal changes in NP bacterial profiles, and associated exposures, among healthy infants from low-income households in South Africa., Methods: We used short fragment (V4 region) 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to characterize NP bacterial profiles from 103 infants in a South African birth cohort, at monthly intervals from birth through the first 12 months of life and six monthly thereafter until 30 months., Results: Corynebacterium and Staphylococcus were dominant colonizers at 1 month of life; however, these were rapidly replaced by Moraxella- or Haemophilus-dominated profiles by 4 months. This succession was almost universal and largely independent of a broad range of exposures. Warm weather (summer), lower gestational age, maternal smoking, no day-care attendance, antibiotic exposure, or low height-for-age z score at 12 months were associated with higher alpha and beta diversity. Summer was also associated with higher relative abundances of Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Neisseria, or anaerobic gram-negative bacteria, whilst spring and winter were associated with higher relative abundances of Haemophilus or Corynebacterium, respectively. Maternal smoking was associated with higher relative abundances of Porphyromonas. Antibiotic therapy (or isoniazid prophylaxis for tuberculosis) was associated with higher relative abundance of anerobic taxa (Porphyromonas, Fusobacterium, and Prevotella) and with lower relative abundances of health associated-taxa Corynebacterium and Dolosigranulum. HIV-exposure was associated with higher relative abundances of Klebsiella or Veillonella and lower relative abundances of an unclassified genus within the family Lachnospiraceae., Conclusions: In this intensively sampled cohort, there was rapid and predictable replacement of early profiles dominated by health-associated Corynebacterium and Dolosigranulum with those dominated by Moraxella and Haemophilus, independent of exposures. Season and antibiotic exposure were key determinants of NP bacterial profiles. Understudied but highly prevalent exposures prevalent in LMICs, including maternal smoking and HIV-exposure, were associated with NP bacterial profiles. Video Abstract., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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18. Sputum bacterial load and bacterial composition correlate with lung function and are altered by long-term azithromycin treatment in children with HIV-associated chronic lung disease.
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Abotsi RE, Dube FS, Rehman AM, Claassen-Weitz S, Xia Y, Simms V, Mwaikono KS, Gardner-Lubbe S, McHugh G, Ngwira LG, Kwambana-Adams B, Heyderman RS, Odland JØ, Ferrand RA, and Nicol MP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Child, Azithromycin therapeutic use, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Sputum microbiology, Bacterial Load, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Bacteria genetics, Haemophilus, Moraxella, Lung microbiology, Lung Diseases drug therapy, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Long-term azithromycin (AZM) treatment reduces the frequency of acute respiratory exacerbation in children and adolescents with HIV-associated chronic lung disease (HCLD). However, the impact of this treatment on the respiratory bacteriome is unknown., Method: African children with HCLD (defined as forced expiratory volume in 1 s z-score (FEV1z) less than - 1.0 with no reversibility) were enrolled in a placebo-controlled trial of once-weekly AZM given for 48-weeks (BREATHE trial). Sputum samples were collected at baseline, 48 weeks (end of treatment) and 72 weeks (6 months post-intervention in participants who reached this timepoint before trial conclusion). Sputum bacterial load and bacteriome profiles were determined using 16S rRNA gene qPCR and V4 region amplicon sequencing, respectively. The primary outcomes were within-participant and within-arm (AZM vs placebo) changes in the sputum bacteriome measured across baseline, 48 weeks and 72 weeks. Associations between clinical or socio-demographic factors and bacteriome profiles were also assessed using linear regression., Results: In total, 347 participants (median age: 15.3 years, interquartile range [12.7-17.7]) were enrolled and randomised to AZM (173) or placebo (174). After 48 weeks, participants in the AZM arm had reduced sputum bacterial load vs placebo arm (16S rRNA copies/µl in log
10 , mean difference and 95% confidence interval [CI] of AZM vs placebo - 0.54 [- 0.71; - 0.36]). Shannon alpha diversity remained stable in the AZM arm but declined in the placebo arm between baseline and 48 weeks (3.03 vs. 2.80, p = 0.04, Wilcoxon paired test). Bacterial community structure changed in the AZM arm at 48 weeks compared with baseline (PERMANOVA test p = 0.003) but resolved at 72 weeks. The relative abundances of genera previously associated with HCLD decreased in the AZM arm at 48 weeks compared with baseline, including Haemophilus (17.9% vs. 25.8%, p < 0.05, ANCOM ω = 32) and Moraxella (1% vs. 1.9%, p < 0.05, ANCOM ω = 47). This reduction was sustained at 72 weeks relative to baseline. Lung function (FEV1z) was negatively associated with bacterial load (coefficient, [CI]: - 0.09 [- 0.16; - 0.02]) and positively associated with Shannon diversity (0.19 [0.12; 0.27]). The relative abundance of Neisseria (coefficient, [standard error]: (2.85, [0.7], q = 0.01), and Haemophilus (- 6.1, [1.2], q < 0.001) were positively and negatively associated with FEV1z, respectively. An increase in the relative abundance of Streptococcus from baseline to 48 weeks was associated with improvement in FEV1z (3.2 [1.11], q = 0.01) whilst an increase in Moraxella was associated with decline in FEV1z (-2.74 [0.74], q = 0.002)., Conclusions: AZM treatment preserved sputum bacterial diversity and reduced the relative abundances of the HCLD-associated genera Haemophilus and Moraxella. These bacteriological effects were associated with improvement in lung function and may account for reduced respiratory exacerbations associated with AZM treatment of children with HCLD. Video Abstract., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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19. Medical Students' Participation in Extracurricular Activities: Motivations, Contributions, and Barriers. A Qualitative Study.
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Achar Fujii RN, Kobayasi R, Claassen Enns S, and Zen Tempski P
- Abstract
Introduction: Extracurricular activities in medical education are defined as any social, philanthropic, non-mandatory, and unpaid activities. These activities promote interactions between students and the community in ways that both provide care and create learning opportunities and experiences for both students and the community at large. This study elaborates on the motivational aspects, learnings, and barriers that occur when students participate in these activities., Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of medical students in their first to fifth years. Qualitative analyses have been used to understand the motivation, barriers, and contributions associated with extracurricular activities participation., Results: Of the 586 students enrolled in the medical course, 462 students agreed to participate in the research. The students reported that they were motivated to participate in contributing to society, support their professional choices, integrate their knowledge, gain life experience, develop communication and leadership skills, learn to work in a team, and become more responsible, empathetic, and resilient. Barriers to participation were the limited number of available positions, selection criteria, lack of support from those involved, personal issues, poor time management, risk of lowered academic performance, and lack of physical and financial resources., Discussion: Medical students are motivated to participate in Community-based extracurricular activities (CBEA) and this experience leads to improvement in the curriculum and can develop fundamental skills and attitudes such as leadership, commitment, and responsibility. To maximize the benefits of these activities, schools must support students and ensure that they have the time and chance to participate without physical strain, that were barriers mentioned by the academics., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work., (© 2022 Achar Fujii et al.)
- Published
- 2022
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20. The association between bacteria colonizing the upper respiratory tract and lower respiratory tract infection in young children: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Lim KYL, Mullally C, Zar HJ, and Nicol MP
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Bacteria classification, Bacteria pathogenicity, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Infections microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Bacteria colonizing the upper respiratory tract (URT) of young children play a key role in the pathogenesis of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI)., Objectives: To systematically review the literature on the association between bacteria colonizing the URT and LRTI among young children., Data Sources: MEDLINE, Academic Search Premier, Africa-Wide Information and CINAHL, Scopus and Web of Science., Study Eligibility Criteria: Studies published between 1923 and 2020, investigating URT bacteria from LRTI cases and controls., Participants: Children under 5 years with and without acute LRTI., Methods: Three reviewers independently screened titles, abstracts and full texts. Meta-analysis was done using Mantel-Haenszel fixed- or random-effects models., Results: Most eligible studies (41/50) tested nasopharyngeal specimens when investigating URT bacteria. Most studies were of cross-sectional design (44/50). Twenty-four studies were performed in children in lower- or lower-middle-income countries (LMICs). There was higher prevalence of Haemophilus influenzae (pooled OR 1.60; 95% CI 1.23-2.07) and Klebsiella spp. (pooled OR 2.04; 95% CI 1.17-3.55) from URT specimens of cases versus controls. We observed a positive association between the detection of Streptococcus pneumoniae from URT specimens and LRTI after excluding studies where there was more antibiotic treatment prior to sampling in cases vs. controls (pooled OR 1.41; 95% CI 1.04-1.90). High density colonization with S. pneumoniae (>6.9 log
10 copies/mL) was associated with an increased risk for LRTI. The associations between both Streptococcus and Haemophilus URT detection and LRTI were supported, at genus level, by 16S rRNA sequencing. Evidence for the role of Moraxella catarrhalis and Staphylococcus aureus was inconclusive., Conclusions: Detection of H. influenzae or Klebsiella spp. in the URT was associated with LRTI, while evidence for association with S. pneumoniae was less conclusive. Longitudinal studies assessing URT microbial communities, together with environmental and host factors are needed to better understand pathogenesis of childhood LRTI., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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21. Using a multiple-delivery-mode training approach to develop local capacity and infrastructure for advanced bioinformatics in Africa.
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Ras V, Botha G, Aron S, Lennard K, Allali I, Claassen-Weitz S, Mwaikono KS, Kennedy D, Holmes JR, Rendon G, Panji S, Fields CJ, and Mulder N
- Subjects
- Africa, Algorithms, Curriculum, Genome, Human, Geography, Humans, Microbiota, Computational Biology education, Computational Biology methods, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Software
- Abstract
With more microbiome studies being conducted by African-based research groups, there is an increasing demand for knowledge and skills in the design and analysis of microbiome studies and data. However, high-quality bioinformatics courses are often impeded by differences in computational environments, complicated software stacks, numerous dependencies, and versions of bioinformatics tools along with a lack of local computational infrastructure and expertise. To address this, H3ABioNet developed a 16S rRNA Microbiome Intermediate Bioinformatics Training course, extending its remote classroom model. The course was developed alongside experienced microbiome researchers, bioinformaticians, and systems administrators, who identified key topics to address. Development of containerised workflows has previously been undertaken by H3ABioNet, and Singularity containers were used here to enable the deployment of a standard replicable software stack across different hosting sites. The pilot ran successfully in 2019 across 23 sites registered in 11 African countries, with more than 200 participants formally enrolled and 106 volunteer staff for onsite support. The pulling, running, and testing of the containers, software, and analyses on various clusters were performed prior to the start of the course by hosting classrooms. The containers allowed the replication of analyses and results across all participating classrooms running a cluster and remained available posttraining ensuring analyses could be repeated on real data. Participants thus received the opportunity to analyse their own data, while local staff were trained and supported by experienced experts, increasing local capacity for ongoing research support. This provides a model for delivering topic-specific bioinformatics courses across Africa and other remote/low-resourced regions which overcomes barriers such as inadequate infrastructures, geographical distance, and access to expertise and educational materials., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
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22. The Influence of DNA Extraction and Lipid Removal on Human Milk Bacterial Profiles.
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Ojo-Okunola A, Claassen-Weitz S, Mwaikono KS, Gardner-Lubbe S, Zar HJ, Nicol MP, and du Toit E
- Abstract
Culture-independent molecular techniques have advanced the characterization of environmental and human samples including the human milk (HM) bacteriome. However, extraction of high-quality genomic DNA that is representative of the bacterial population in samples is crucial. Lipids removal from HM prior to DNA extraction is common practice, but this may influence the bacterial population detected. The objective of this study was to compare four commercial DNA extraction kits and lipid removal in relation to HM bacterial profiles. Four commercial DNA extraction kits, QIAamp
® DNA Microbiome Kit, ZR Fungal/Bacterial DNA MiniPrep™, QIAsymphony DSP DNA Kit and ZymoBIOMICS™ DNA Miniprep Kit, were assessed using milk collected from ten healthy lactating women. The kits were evaluated based on their ability to extract high quantities of pure DNA from HM and how well they extracted DNA from bacterial communities present in a commercial mock microbial community standard spiked into HM. Finally, the kits were evaluated by assessing their extraction repeatability. Bacterial profiles were assessed using Illumina MiSeq sequencing targeting the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene. The ZR Fungal/Bacterial DNA MiniPrep™ and ZymoBIOMICS™ DNA Miniprep (Zymo Research Corp., Irvine, CA, USA) kits extracted the highest DNA yields with the best purity. DNA extracted using ZR Fungal/Bacterial DNA MiniPrep™ best represented the bacteria in the mock community spiked into HM. In un-spiked HM samples, DNA extracted using the QIAsymphony DSP DNA kit showed statistically significant differences in taxa prevalence from DNA extracted using ZR Fungal/Bacterial DNA MiniPrep™ and ZymoBIOMICS™ DNA Miniprep kits. The only difference between skim and whole milk is observed in bacterial profiles with differing relative abundances of Enhydrobacter and Acinetobacter . DNA extraction, but not lipids removal, substantially influences bacterial profiles detected in HM samples, emphasizing the need for careful selection of a DNA extraction kit to improve DNA recovery from a range of bacterial taxa.- Published
- 2020
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23. Optimizing 16S rRNA gene profile analysis from low biomass nasopharyngeal and induced sputum specimens.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Gardner-Lubbe S, Mwaikono KS, du Toit E, Zar HJ, and Nicol MP
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- Bacteria genetics, Bacteria isolation & purification, Biomass, Computer Simulation, DNA, Bacterial genetics, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, Gene Dosage, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Specimen Handling, Bacteria classification, Nasopharynx microbiology, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Sputum microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Careful consideration of experimental artefacts is required in order to successfully apply high-throughput 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) gene sequencing technology. Here we introduce experimental design, quality control and "denoising" approaches for sequencing low biomass specimens., Results: We found that bacterial biomass is a key driver of 16S rRNA gene sequencing profiles generated from bacterial mock communities and that the use of different deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) extraction methods [DSP Virus/Pathogen Mini Kit® (Kit-QS) and ZymoBIOMICS DNA Miniprep Kit (Kit-ZB)] and storage buffers [PrimeStore® Molecular Transport medium (Primestore) and Skim-milk, Tryptone, Glucose and Glycerol (STGG)] further influence these profiles. Kit-QS better represented hard-to-lyse bacteria from bacterial mock communities compared to Kit-ZB. Primestore storage buffer yielded lower levels of background operational taxonomic units (OTUs) from low biomass bacterial mock community controls compared to STGG. In addition to bacterial mock community controls, we used technical repeats (nasopharyngeal and induced sputum processed in duplicate, triplicate or quadruplicate) to further evaluate the effect of specimen biomass and participant age at specimen collection on resultant sequencing profiles. We observed a positive correlation (r = 0.16) between specimen biomass and participant age at specimen collection: low biomass technical repeats (represented by < 500 16S rRNA gene copies/μl) were primarily collected at < 14 days of age. We found that low biomass technical repeats also produced higher alpha diversities (r = - 0.28); 16S rRNA gene profiles similar to no template controls (Primestore); and reduced sequencing reproducibility. Finally, we show that the use of statistical tools for in silico contaminant identification, as implemented through the decontam package in R, provides better representations of indigenous bacteria following decontamination., Conclusions: We provide insight into experimental design, quality control steps and "denoising" approaches for 16S rRNA gene high-throughput sequencing of low biomass specimens. We highlight the need for careful assessment of DNA extraction methods and storage buffers; sequence quality and reproducibility; and in silico identification of contaminant profiles in order to avoid spurious results.
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- 2020
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24. Influence of Socio-Economic and Psychosocial Profiles on the Human Breast Milk Bacteriome of South African Women.
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Ojo-Okunola A, Claassen-Weitz S, Mwaikono KS, Gardner-Lubbe S, Stein DJ, Zar HJ, Nicol MP, and du Toit E
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- Adult, Age Factors, Bacteriological Techniques, Female, Humans, Lactation, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, South Africa, Bacteria growth & development, Microbiota, Milk, Human microbiology, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
The human breast milk (HBM) bacteriome is an important, continuous source of microbes to the neonate in early life, playing an important role in shaping the infant's intestinal bacteriome. Study of the composition of the HBM bacteriome is an emerging area of research, with little information available, particularly from low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this study was to characterize the diversity of bacterial communities in HBM samples collected between 6-10 weeks postpartum from lactating South African women and to study potential influencing factors of the bacteriome. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of samples from 554 women, we demonstrated that the HBM bacteriome was largely dominated by the phyla Firmicutes (mean relative abundance: 71.1%) and Actinobacteria (mean relative abundance: 16.4%). The most abundant genera identified from the HBM bacteriome were Streptococcus (mean relative abundance: 48.6%), Staphylococcus (mean relative abundance: 17.8%), Rothia (mean relative abundance: 5.8%), and Corynebacterium (mean relative abundance: 4.3%). "Core" bacterial genera including Corynebacterium , Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Rothia, Veillonella, Gemella, Acinetobacter, Micrococcus and a genus belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae family were present in 80% of samples. HBM samples were classified, according to their bacteriome, into three major clusters, dominated by the genera Staphylococcus (cluster 1), a combination of Staphylococcus and Streptococcus (cluster 2), and Streptococcus (cluster 3). The cluster groups differed significantly for Shannon and chao1 richness indices. Bacterial interactions were studied using co-occurrence networks with positive associations observed between the abundances of Staphylococcus and Corynebacteria (members of the skin microflora) and between Streptococcus, Rothia, Veillonella, and Gemella (members of the oral microflora). HBM from older mothers had a higher Shannon diversity index. The study site was associated with differences in HBM bacteriome composition (permutational multivariate analysis of variance using distance matrices (PERMANOVA), p < 0.05). No other tested socio-demographic or psychosocial factors were associated with HBM bacterial composition., Competing Interests: The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.
- Published
- 2019
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25. HIV-exposure, early life feeding practices and delivery mode impacts on faecal bacterial profiles in a South African birth cohort.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Gardner-Lubbe S, Nicol P, Botha G, Mounaud S, Shankar J, Nierman WC, Mulder N, Budree S, Zar HJ, Nicol MP, and Kaba M
- Subjects
- Adult, Bifidobacterium genetics, Bifidobacterium isolation & purification, Breast Feeding, Feces virology, Feeding Behavior, Female, Firmicutes genetics, Firmicutes isolation & purification, HIV genetics, HIV pathogenicity, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Infant, Infant Formula microbiology, Infant, Newborn, Meconium virology, Mothers, Proteobacteria genetics, Proteobacteria isolation & purification, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, South Africa epidemiology, Feces microbiology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome genetics, HIV Infections microbiology, Meconium microbiology
- Abstract
There are limited data on meconium and faecal bacterial profiles from African infants and their mothers. We characterized faecal bacterial communities of infants and mothers participating in a South African birth cohort. Stool and meconium specimens were collected from 90 mothers and 107 infants at birth, and from a subset of 72 and 36 infants at 4-12 and 20-28 weeks of age, respectively. HIV-unexposed infants were primarily exclusively breastfed at 4-12 (49%, 26/53) and 20-28 weeks (62%, 16/26). In contrast, HIV-exposed infants were primarily exclusively formula fed at 4-12 (53%; 10/19) and 20-28 weeks (70%, 7/10). Analysis (of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences of the V4 hypervariable region) of the 90 mother-infant pairs showed that meconium bacterial profiles [dominated by Proteobacteria (89%)] were distinct from those of maternal faeces [dominated by Firmicutes (66%) and Actinobacteria (15%)]. Actinobacteria predominated at 4-12 (65%) and 20-28 (50%) weeks. HIV-exposed infants had significantly higher faecal bacterial diversities at both 4-12 (p = 0.026) and 20-28 weeks (p = 0.002). HIV-exposed infants had lower proportions of Bifidobacterium (p = 0.010) at 4-12 weeks. Maternal faecal bacterial profiles were influenced by HIV status, feeding practices and mode of delivery. Further longitudinal studies are required to better understand how these variables influence infant and maternal faecal bacterial composition.
- Published
- 2018
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26. Current Knowledge and Future Research Directions on Fecal Bacterial Patterns and Their Association with Asthma.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Wiysonge CS, Machingaidze S, Thabane L, Horsnell WG, Zar HJ, Nicol MP, and Kaba M
- Published
- 2016
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27. Fecal Carriage of Staphylococcus aureus in the Hospital and Community Setting: A Systematic Review.
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Claassen-Weitz S, Shittu AO, Ngwarai MR, Thabane L, Nicol MP, and Kaba M
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Background and Rationale: Staphylococcus aureus fecal carriage has been identified as a potential source for nosocomial transmission and a risk factor for disease development. This systematic review determined the overall S. aureus [including methicillin susceptible and resistant S. aureus (MSSA and MRSA)] fecal carriage rates within the community and healthcare settings., Methodology: Peer-reviewed articles indexed in Medline, Scopus, Academic Search Premier, Africa-Wide Information, CINAHL, and Web of Science were identified using applicable and controlled vocabulary through to 11 November 2015. Eligible studies were ascertained by three independent reviewers. Random-effects meta-analyses of proportions were performed to determine S. aureus, MSSA and MRSA fecal carriage rates reported by eligible studies., Results: Twenty six studies were included in this review. The pooled estimates for S. aureus, MSSA and MRSA fecal carriage were 26% (95% confidence interval (CI): 16.8-36.3%), 86% (95% confidence interval (CI): 65.9-97.9%) and 10% (95% CI: 0.7-27.0%), respectively. Fecal S. aureus carriage rates increased on average from 10 to 65% during the first 8 weeks of life, followed by an average carriage rate of 64% at 6 months and 46% at 1 year of life. Genotyping techniques were employed mainly in studies conducted in developed countries and comprised largely of gel-based techniques. Six studies reported on the role of S. aureus fecal strains in diarrhea (n = 2) and the risk for acquiring infections (n = 4). Eight of the 26 studies included in this review performed antibiotic susceptibility testing of S. aureus fecal isolates., Conclusion: This study provides evidence that screening for S. aureus fecal carriage, at least in populations at high risk, could be an effective measure for the prevention of S. aureus transmission and infection in the healthcare and community setting. More well-structured studies need to be conducted and sequence-based genotyping techniques should be employed for the comparison of isolates on a global scale in both developing and developed countries.
- Published
- 2016
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