Publications by authors named "A McCraw"

Antibodies used for cancer therapy are monoclonal IgGs, but tumor-targeting IgE antibodies have shown enhanced effector cell potency against cancer in preclinical models. Research-grade recombinant IgE antibodies have been generated and studied for several decades. The recent Phase 1 clinical trial of the first-in-class MOv18 IgE, however, necessitated the inaugural process development and scaled manufacture of a recombinant IgE to clinical quality standards.

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In this Monograph, we explored neurocognitive predictors of executive function (EF) development in a cohort of children followed longitudinally from 30 to 54 months of age. We tested predictions of a dynamic field model that explains development in a benchmark measure of EF development, the dimensional change card sort (DCCS) task. This is a rule-use task that measures children's ability to switch between sorting cards by shape or color rules.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study reviews the role of glycosylation in human IgE (Immunoglobulin E) and how it affects its structure, function, and relation to diseases, especially allergies.
  • It emphasizes that despite inconsistent findings from various studies, there is evidence of different glycosylation patterns in allergic vs. healthy individuals and their functional implications in allergic reactions.
  • The review suggests that certain glycosylation changes could lead to potential therapeutic targets and underscores the need for improved research methods to further investigate these effects.
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Epidemiological studies have explored the relationship between allergic diseases and cancer risk or prognosis in AllergoOncology. Some studies suggest an inverse association, but uncertainties remain, including in IgE-mediated diseases and glioma. Allergic disease stems from a Th2-biased immune response to allergens in predisposed atopic individuals.

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Significance: Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is unique among neuroimaging techniques in its ability to estimate changes in both oxyhemoglobin (HbO) and deoxyhemoglobin (HbR). However, fNIRS research has applied various data reporting practices based on these chromophores as measures of neural activation.

Aim: To quantify the variability of fNIRS chromophore data reporting practices and to explore recent data reporting trends in the literature.

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