O-202 Usage of laser during trophectoderm biopsy and its affect on PGT-A results and moscaism

2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
H K Yelke ◽  
Y. Kumtepe Colakoglu ◽  
B Yuksel ◽  
M Cetinkaya ◽  
S Kahraman

Abstract Study question Does laser use during trophectoderm biopsy affect biopsy results on prehatching embryos with regard to mosaicism ? Summary answer According to our findings laser usage during trophectoderm biopsy increases mosaic results on next generation sequencing (NGS) irrespective of embryo quality. What is known already Chromosomal mosaicism, which is a result of mitotic errors after fertilization, is defined as the presence of karyotypically distinct cell lines within an embryo. The introduction of NGS made it possible to detect chromosomal mosaicism at levels as low as 20%. The incidence of mosaicism is highly variable between clinics which reported the incidences between 4-32%. Apart from the biological reasons, there are also various technical factors that may impact the incidence of mosaicism. One of the most emphasized factors is the trophoectoderm biopsy technique. Laser usage and number of laser pulses may cause excessive heat during the procedure Study design, size, duration The mosaicism ratio in embryos in which trophectoderm biopsy was performed with or without laser, between January 2017 December 2020 in Istanbul Memorial Hospital (IMH) were examined retrospectively. A total of 13002 embryos were analyzed. A subgroup analysis was also performed regarding mosaicism ratios in different embryo qualities. Blastocysts were classified according to Gardner’s classification and classified as follows: top quality-TQ (4AA,5AA,6AA), good quality-GQ (3AA, 4,5,6AB,BA) and moderate quality-MQ (3,4,5 BB). Participants/materials, setting, methods The biopsy samples of the cases who had PGT-A in IMH between 2017-2020 were evaluated by NGS method. This method enables the identification of embryos with 20% to 80% mosaicism. The study assessed whether there was an increase in the embryos with mosaic results due to the use of laser during biopsy. The effects of laser use among the TQ (4AA,5AA,6AA), GQ (3AA, 4,5,6AB,BA) and MQ (3,4,5 BB) groups according to Garder classification were analyzed. Main results and the role of chance Trophectoderm biopsy was applied on 13002 embryos within the specified period. During biopsy in 5088 embryos laser was used and in 7843 embryos laser was not used, and biopsy was performed mechanically (flicking method). After observing the biopsy results, 945/5088 (18.5%) of the laser applied embryos; and 1087/7914 (13.7%) of laser not applied embryos were defined as mosaic(p < 0.0001). When mosaicism rates were examined according to embryo qualities, the rate of mosaicism was 19.3%(469/2430), 18.2%(290/1591) and 13.2%( 380/2875), 13.5 (426/3141) respectively in embryos with and without laser in TQ and GQ groups. A statistically high level of significance (p < 0.0001) was observed between the embryos evaluated as top quality and good quality before biopsy. Regarding the evaluation in the moderate group embryos, although the mosaicism rates tended to increase on the laser applied group side 40/248(16.1%), no statistical difference was observed when compared to non-laser group 103/670(15,4%). (P > 0.05) Limitations, reasons for caution The retrospective nature of the data is the main limitation of the study. On the other hand, the large number of NGS based PGT-A tested TQ and GQ embryos from a single center and resuts from single laboratory. However, further studies are required to corroborate our findings. Wider implications of the findings Laser dependent heat effect may increase mosaicism. To reduce the cell damage, teasing of cells should be avoided and a minimum number of laser pulses should be used in order to avoid excessive heat and contact points should be preferably confined to cell junctions Trial registration number None

2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 121-129
Author(s):  
Vivienne Isabella Blackhall ◽  
Kenneth Grant Walker ◽  
Iya Whiteley ◽  
Philip Wilson

BackgroundThe study of decision making in complex naturalistic environments poses several challenges. In response to these, video-stimulated cued-recall-debrief was developed. It involves an individual wearing a head-mounted camera which records a task from their point of view. Afterwards, footage captured is reviewed along with a facilitated debrief to help externalise cognitive processes. In theory, motion, audio and visual cues generate a high level of experiential immersion which helps the expert to articulate previously hidden thoughts and actions.ObjectiveTo examine the current evidence for video-stimulated cued-recall-debrief as a means of explicating expert thoughts and feelings in complex tasks in a range of environments.Study selectionMEDLINE, EMBASE, Education Resources Information Center, SPORTDiscus, PsycINFO and Google Scholar were searched for articles containing the key terms ‘cued-recall (debrief)’, ‘decision making’, ‘skills’ and ‘video recording’. Studies were included if they examined the following outcomes: (1) feasibility, (2) extent of experiential immersion, (3) ability to generate unique insight into decision-making processes and (4) current applications. 1831 articles were identified initially, and 9 studies were included in the final review.FindingsVideo-stimulated cued-recall-debrief is associated with a high level of experiential immersion and generates between two and four times the number of recollections compared with free recall. It can be used to build models of cognitive activity and to characterise the way in which more and less skilled individuals tend to think and feel.ConclusionsThe technique could be used to explicate expertise within medicine: these insights into performance could be used as a training tool for other practitioners.Trial registration numberCRD42017057484.


Trials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sena Jawad ◽  
Neena Modi ◽  
A. Toby Prevost ◽  
Chris Gale

Abstract Background We aimed to test whether a common set of key data items reported across high-impact neonatal clinical trials could be identified, and to quantify their completeness in routinely recorded United Kingdom neonatal data held in the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD). Methods We systematically reviewed neonatal clinical trials published in four high-impact medical journals over 10 years (2006–2015) and extracted baseline characteristics, stratification items and potential confounders used to adjust primary outcomes. Completeness was examined using data held in the NNRD for identified data items, for infants admitted to neonatal units in 2015. The NNRD is a repository of routinely recorded data extracted from neonatal Electronic Patient Records (EPR) of all admissions to National Health Service (NHS) Neonatal Units in England, Wales and Scotland. We defined missing data as an empty field or an implausible value. We reported common data items as frequencies and percentages alongside percentages of completeness. Results We identified 44 studies involving 32,095 infants and 126 data items. Fourteen data items were reported by more than 20% of studies. Gestational age (95%), sex (93%) and birth weight (91%) were the most common baseline data items. The completeness of data in the NNRD was high for these data with greater than 90% completeness found for 9 of the 14 most common items. Conclusion High-impact neonatal clinical trials share common data items. In the United Kingdom, these items can be obtained at a high level of completeness from routinely recorded data held in the NNRD. The feasibility and efficiency using routinely recorded EPR data, such as that held in the NNRD, for clinical trials, rather than collecting these items anew, should be examined. Trial registration PROSPERO registration number CRD42016046138. Registered prospectively on 17 August 2016.


Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Yong Huang ◽  
Yafu Lin

Laser-assisted cell direct-write technique has been a promising biomaterial direct-write method. For safe and reproducible cell direct writing, the cell damage due to process-induced external stress must be understood in addition to biological property research. The objective of this study is to model the thermoelastic stress wave propagation inside the coating in laser-assisted cell direct writing when the vaporization or optical breakdown of coating materials is not available. It is found that a bipolar pressure pair has been developed within a finite thin coating medium, locations near the laser focal spot experience higher stresses, and shorter duration laser pulses lead to higher thermoelastic stresses. This study will help understand the photomechanical stress and its relevance with biomaterial damage in laser-assisted cell direct writing.


BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. e022304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yadong Niu ◽  
Liang Zhang ◽  
Ting Ye ◽  
Yan Yan ◽  
Yan Zhang

ObjectiveChina has been attempting to control the patients’ choice of high-level medical institutions through series measures of first point of contact at primary medical institutions, but the outcome is considered poor. We aim to analyse whether unsuccessful treatment in primary medical institutions can lead to the patients’ choice of high-level medical institutions.DesignA retrospective cluster sample study.SettingThe study setting was in Macheng city, Hubei province.ParticipantsThe respondents are township–county (TC) patients (patients who first went to township hospitals and then county hospitals within 30 days for the same disease) who experienced unsuccessful treatment in primary medical institutions. A total of 2090 TC patients were screened out based on the New Rural Cooperative Medical System database in 2013.Main outcome measuresThe choice of patients between township hospitals (primary medical institutions) and county hospitals was observed. We compared TC patients’ ratio of choosing county hospitals (RoCC) before TC experience with after TC experience. Thereafter, we compared RoCC of TC patients and non-TC patients (patients who did not experience TC) based on coarsened exact matching.ResultsThe ratio of TC for outpatient in township hospitals is 0.68% and that of TC for inpatient in township hospitals is 3.37%. RoCC for TC disease increased from 20.8% to 35.5% (p<0.001), RoCC for other disease increased from 35% to 37.3% (p=0.01). TC patients had significantly higher RoCC than non-TC patients (p<0.001).ConclusionsPatients’ choice of high-level medical institutions is highly associated with the experience of unsuccessful treatment in primary medical institutions. Moreover, people likely select high-level medical institutions thereafter regardless of conditions in rural China. Unsuccessful treatment in primary medical institutions is inevitable for patients. Thus, additional measures should be considered in lowering the potential risks for patients when treatments fail.Trial registration numberChiCTR-OOR-14005563.


1997 ◽  
Vol 08 (01) ◽  
pp. 113-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sorin Draghici

This paper presents a neural network based artificial vision system able to analyze the image of a car given by a camera, locate the registration plate and recognize the registration number of the car. The paper describes in detail various practical problems encountered in implementing this particular application and the solution used to solve them. The main features of the system presented are: controlled stability-plasticity behavior, controlled reliability threshold, both off-line and on-line learning, self assessment of the output reliability and high reliability based on high level multiple feedback. The system has been designed using a modular approach. Sub-modules can be upgraded and/or substituted independently, thus making the system potentially suitable in a large variety of vision applications. The OCR engine was designed as an interchangeable plug-in module. This allows the user to choose an OCR engine which is suited to the particular application and to upgrade it easily in the future. At present, there are several versions of this OCR engine. One of them is based on a fully connected feedforward artificial neural network with sigmoidal activation functions. This network can be trained with various training algorithms such as error backpropagation. An alternative OCR engine is based on the constraint based decomposition (CBD) training architecture. The system has showed the following performances (on average) on real-world data: successful plate location and segmentation about 99%, successful character recognition about 98% and successful recognition of complete registration plates about 80%


2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 383-395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tri Cong Phung ◽  
Min Jeong Kim ◽  
Hyungpil Moon ◽  
Ja Choon Koo ◽  
Hyouk Ryeol Choi

2017 ◽  
Vol 307 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kati Seidl ◽  
Michèle Leemann ◽  
Miguel Palheiros Marques ◽  
Carole Rachmühl ◽  
Nadja Leimer ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sena Jawad ◽  
Neena Modi ◽  
A Toby Prevost ◽  
Chris Gale

Abstract Background We aimed to test whether a common set of key data items reported across high impact neonatal clinical trials could be identified, and to quantify their completeness in routinely recorded United Kingdom neonatal data held in the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD). Methods We systematically reviewed neonatal clinical trials published in four high impact medical journals over 10 years (2006-2015) and extracted baseline characteristics, stratification items, and potential confounders used to adjust primary outcomes. Completeness was examined using data held in the NNRD for identified data items, for infants admitted to neonatal units in 2015. The NNRD is a repository of routinely recorded data extracted from neonatal Electronic Patient Records (EPR) of all admissions to National Health Service (NHS) Neonatal Units in England, Wales and Scotland. We defined missing data as an empty field or an implausible value. We reported common data items as frequencies and percentages alongside percentages of completeness. Results We identified 44 studies involving 32,095 infants and 126 data items. Fourteen data items were reported by more than 20% of studies. Gestational age (95%), sex (93%) and birth weight (91%) were the most common baseline data items. The completeness of data in the NNRD was high for these data with greater than 90% completeness found for 9 of the 14 most common items. Conclusion High impact neonatal clinical trials share common data items. In the United Kingdom, these items can be obtained at a high level of completeness from routinely recorded data held in the NNRD. The feasibility and efficiency using routinely recorded EPR data, such as that held in the NNRD, for clinical trials, rather than collecting these items anew, should be examined. Registration PROSPERO registration number CRD42016046138, registered prospectively 17 th August 2016


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 248-256

Marketing in the health system contributes to increasing public satisfaction in the demand for medical care, providing the population with high-quality medical care and improving their standard of living. The method of identifying and analyzing contact points, based on the results of studying and taking into account the opinion of patients, for the implementation of patient-oriented and participative approaches to marketing medical services, provides for the active participation of the patient himself in discussing issues of his own health, which can be used to evaluate and qualitatively improve the activities of health organizations. In modern conditions, there are problems in the dental services market due to the lack of modern equipment and the provision of highly qualified quality dental care. The client orientation of medical personnel is a significant indicator of the quality of medical services, the patient's perception of the value of the service and is associated, both with a high level of medical service delivery and the qualification of medical personnel. The lack of managerial and financial autonomy of health-care organizations limits their ability to improve the use of financial resources. Marketing research is mainly used to optimize the activities of non-state health organizations and allows the development of a dental clinic by introducing economically justified forms of medical care and the possibility of improving the provision of medical services, which will contribute to improving dental care for the population.


Author(s):  
BO Y. CHANG ◽  
IGNACIO R. SOLÁ ◽  
JESÚS SANTAMARÍA ◽  
VLADIMIR S. MALINOVSKY

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