Publications by authors named "A C McGill"

Mast cells (MCs) expressing a distinctive protease phenotype (MCTs) selectively expand within the epithelium of human mucosal tissues during type 2 (T2) inflammation. While MCTs are phenotypically distinct from subepithelial MCs (MCTCs), signals driving human MCT differentiation and this subset's contribution to inflammation remain unexplored. Here, we have identified TGF-β as a key driver of the MCT transcriptome in nasal polyps.

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Background: Patients with aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD) have difficult-to-treat asthma and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) and often require treatment with biologic therapy for asthma or CRSwNP. Healthcare utilization in patients with AERD has not been well described since the advent of respiratory biologics.

Objective: To determine real-world healthcare utilization and quality of life among patients with AERD and to understand the impact of dupilumab, a monoclonal antibody targeting the interleukin 4 receptor, on patient-reported health outcomes and healthcare utilization.

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Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are naturally occurring, non-digestible sugars found in human milk. They have recently become a popular target for industrial synthesis due to their positive effects on the developing gut microbiome and immune system of infants. Microbial synthesis has shown great promise in driving down the cost of these sugars and making them more available for consumers and researchers.

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The assistance to veterans in the UK is provided by the National Health Service and over 1800 military charities. These charities count services using different definitions and reporting systems, so to date a national registry of service usage does not exist. The aim of the Map Of Need Aggregation ResearCH study is to build a standardized registry of service usage data for the military charity sector.

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Background: Healthcare system sustainability is challenged by several critical issues; one of the most pressing is the ageing population. Traditional, episodic care delivery models are not designed for older people who are medically complex and frail. These individuals would benefit from health and social care that is more comprehensive, coordinated, person-centred and accessible in the communities in which they live.

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