Publications by authors named "C J Rosser"

Urinalysis accuracy requires reliable sample stability that is dependent on the chosen collection and storage conditions. The multiplex Oncuria bladder cancer immunoassay currently needs urine samples stored at 4 °C until analysis, which requires more effort, equipment, and workflow than storing samples at room temperature. Thus, successful sample storage at room temperature (20 °C) may reduce laboratory handling time and expenses.

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The trihydroxamic acid bacterial siderophore desferrioxamine B (DFOB, 1) produced by the DesABCD biosynthetic cluster coordinates metals beyond Fe(iii), which identifies potential to modify this chelator type to broaden metal sequestration and/or delivery applications. Rather than producing discrete chelators by total chemical synthesis from native monomers including -hydroxy--succinyl-cadaverine (HSC, 2), the recombinant siderophore synthetase from CNB-440 (DesD) was used with different substrate combinations to produce biocombinatorial mixtures of hydroxamic acid chelators. The mixtures were screened with Ga(iii) or Zr(iv) as surrogates of immunological positron emission tomography (PET) imaging radiometals Ga(iii) or Zr(iv) to inform known or new coordination chemistry.

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Article Synopsis
  • The summary discusses two studies evaluating the safety and efficacy of N-803 (Anktiva) combined with the standard treatment BCG for patients with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).
  • The Phase 1b study used increasing doses of N-803 in BCG-naive participants, while the Phase 2/3 study included participants with BCG-unresponsive disease and a cohort treated solely with N-803.
  • Key findings showed that the combination treatment was effective, eliminating NMIBC in all nine BCG-naive participants and leading to long-lasting results, with a significant percentage of participants avoiding bladder surgery and experiencing minimal adverse effects.
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Rates of waterpipe use increase with very little data reporting any potential health consequences. The current study, a large case-control study, of 4,194 patients from Iran denotes an elevated risk of bladder cancer in exclusive waterpipe smokers compared with non-users. Additional studies are needed to further understand the risk waterpipe smoking has on bladder cancer.

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