Publications by authors named "Cornelissen L"

Saponin-based adjuvants (SBAs) distinguish themselves as vaccine adjuvants by instigating a potent activation of CD8+ T cells. Previously, we discovered SBA's ability to induce cross-presentation in dendritic cells (DCs) leading to CD8+ T cell activation. Moreover, the MHCIICD11b bone marrow-derived DC (BMDC) subset was identified to be the most responsive DC subset to SBA treatment.

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Objectives: PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade can be an effective treatment for advanced breast cancer patients. However, patients with oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) tumors often display only low lymphocyte infiltration, while a large part of triple negative (TN) breast tumors does not generate an effective immunotherapy response. Therefore, new treatment strategies have to be developed.

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The tumor microenvironment of glioblastoma IDH-wildtype is highly immune suppressive and is characterized by a strong component of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). To interfere with the immune suppressive functions of MDSCs, a comprehensive understanding on how MDSCs acquire their suppressive phenotype is essential. Previously, we and others have shown a distinct Sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin (Siglec) receptor expression profile for MDSCs in glioblastoma.

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The T cell is an immune cell subset highly effective in eliminating cancer cells. Cancer immunotherapy empowers T cells and occupies a solid position in cancer treatment. The response rate, however, remains relatively low (<30%).

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Purpose: Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, most research has focused on the management of the acute symptoms of the disease. Yet some people tend to experience symptoms beyond the acute phase, defined as Post-COVID-19 Condition (PCC). This study aims to assess the impact of COVID-19 and PCC on anxiety and depression.

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Background: Although effects of general anesthesia on neuronal activity in the human neonatal brain are incompletely understood, electroencephalography provides some insight and may identify age-dependent differences.

Methods: A systematic search (MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, and Cochrane Library to November 2023) retrieved English language publications reporting electroencephalography during general anesthesia for cardiac or noncardiac surgery in term neonates (37 to 44 weeks postmenstrual age). Data were extracted, and risk of bias (ROBINS-I Cochrane tool) and quality of evidence (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation [GRADE] checklist) were assessed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Previous research has raised concerns about the effects of early anesthesia and surgery on brain development in infants, prompting this study to examine functional brain connectivity in infants with such exposures compared to control infants.
  • The study used EEG to assess brain connectivity in 26 infants who had early anesthesia and 38 control infants at ages 2, 4, and 10 months, focusing on specific frequency bands of brain activity.
  • Results indicated that there was no significant impact of early anesthetic exposure on brain connectivity measures during the first year of life, although age itself did show some effects; further research is planned as these infants develop.
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Background: This study assessed seroprevalence trends of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in the Belgian adult population between March 2021 and April 2022, and explored factors associated with seropositivity and seroreversion among the vaccinated and unvaccinated population.

Methods: A prospective longitudinal surveillance study was conducted within a random sample of the general population (18 + years) in Belgium, selected from the national register through a multistage sampling design. Participants provided a saliva sample and completed a survey questionnaire on three occasions: at baseline and in two follow-up waves.

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Quantitative sensory testing (QST) refers to a group of noninvasive psychophysical tests that examine responses to a range of calibrated mechanical and thermal stimuli. Quantitative sensory testing has been used extensively in adult pain research and has more recently been applied to pediatric pain research. The aims of this scoping review were to map the current state of the field, to identify gaps in the literature, and to inform directions for future research.

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Background: While many studies on the determinants of post-COVID-19 conditions (PCC) have been conducted, little is known about the relationship between SARS-CoV-2 variants and PCC. This study aimed to assess the association between different SARS-CoV-2 variants and the probability of having PCC three months after the infection.

Methods: This study was a longitudinal cohort study conducted between April 2021 and September 2022 in Belgium.

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Since 2022, European countries have been facing an outbreak of mainly cutaneous diphtheria caused by toxigenic among asylum seekers. In Belgium, between 1 March and 31 December 2022, 25 cases of toxigenic infection were confirmed among asylum seekers, mostly among young males from Afghanistan. Multi-locus sequence typing showed that most isolates belonged to sequence types 574 or 377, similar to the majority of cases in other European countries.

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Objectives: Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, most research has focused on its acute pathophysiology, yet some people tend to experience persisting symptoms beyond the acute phase of infection, referred to as post COVID-19 condition (PCC). However, evidence on PCC is still scarce. This study aimed to assess the distribution, classification of symptoms and associated factors of PCC in adults.

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Background: Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, most research has focused on the acute phase of COVID-19, yet some people experience symptoms beyond, referred to as post COVID-19 conditions (PCC). However, evidence on PCC and its impacts on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is still scarce. This study aimed to assess the impact of COVID-19 and PCC on HRQoL.

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Splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) could be used to treat a subset of individuals with genetic diseases, but the systematic identification of such individuals remains a challenge. Here we performed whole-genome sequencing analyses to characterize genetic variation in 235 individuals (from 209 families) with ataxia-telangiectasia, a severely debilitating and life-threatening recessive genetic disorder, yielding a complete molecular diagnosis in almost all individuals. We developed a predictive taxonomy to assess the amenability of each individual to splice-switching ASO intervention; 9% and 6% of the individuals had variants that were 'probably' or 'possibly' amenable to ASO splice modulation, respectively.

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Background: Self-testing has been promoted as a means of increasing COVID-19 test coverage. In Belgium, self-testing was recommended as a complement to the formal, provider-administered indications, such as out of courtesy before meeting others and when feared to be infected. More than a year after the introduction of self-testing their place in the test strategy was evaluated.

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Background: Obesity is a rising world-wide problem and bariatric surgery, also in the reproductive age, is increasingly performed. Bariatric procedures are associated with surgical complications during pregnancy, such as internal herniation.

Cases: In this case series three cases with severe surgical complications after Roux-Y gastric bypass are described.

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Tumors create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment by altering protein expression, but also by changing their glycosylation status, like altered expression of sialoglycans. Sialoglycans are capped with sialic acid sugar residues and are recognized by Siglec immune receptors. Siglec-7 is an inhibitory immune receptor similar to PD-1, and is emerging as glycoimmune checkpoint exploited by cancer cells to evade the immune system.

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Background: To design efficient mitigation measures against COVID-19, understanding the transmission dynamics between different age groups was crucial. The role of children in the pandemic has been intensely debated and involves both scientific and ethical questions. To design efficient age-targeted non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI), a good view of the incidence of the different age groups was needed.

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Objectives: Vaccine effectiveness against transmission (VET) of SARS-CoV-2-infection can be estimated from secondary attack rates observed during contact tracing. We estimated VET, the vaccine-effect on infectiousness of the index case and susceptibility of the high-risk exposure contact (HREC).

Methods: We fitted RT-PCR-test results from HREC to immunity status (vaccine schedule, prior infection, time since last immunity-conferring event), age, sex, calendar week of sampling, household, background positivity rate and dominant VOC using a multilevel Bayesian regression-model.

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Since the original outbreak of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, several rapidly spreading SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VOC) have emerged. Here, we show that a single dose of Ad26.COV2.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how sevoflurane-induced anesthesia affects brainwave patterns in young children, focusing on the coupling between delta and alpha oscillations during anesthesia compared to emergence.
  • - Researchers analyzed EEG data from 31 pediatric patients aged 10 months to 3 years, finding stronger delta-alpha phase-amplitude coupling during anesthesia than during emergence, indicating a unique brain response to anesthesia.
  • - The results indicate that sevoflurane anesthesia can lead to specific patterns of brain activity in children, which could help improve monitoring techniques for anesthesia depth in pediatric surgeries.
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Background: Sensory changes surrounding the incision frequently develop after posterior spinal fusion (PSF) to treat adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Anecdotally, patients may experience sensory changes on the chest wall. Such postsurgical sensory changes are not well described quantitatively.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates tactile sensitivity and lower limb motor coordination in infants, particularly focusing on differences between those with and without prior hospital experiences.
  • Researchers tested 69 infants at 2 and 4 months old using mechanical stimuli on the foot to measure tactile and nociceptive thresholds, finding reliable results in motor responses.
  • The findings suggest that while age impacts nociceptive thresholds, prior surgical or hospital experiences minimally affect sensory processing, indicating resilience in the central nervous system.
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Myeloid cells, crucial players in antitumoral defense, are affected by tumor-derived factors and treatment. The role of myeloid cells and their progenitors prior to tumor infiltration is poorly understood. Here we show single-cell transcriptomics and functional analyses of the myeloid cell lineage in patients with non-medullary thyroid carcinoma (TC) and multinodular goiter, before and after treatment with radioactive iodine compared to healthy controls.

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Background: Radiology requests and reports contain valuable information about diagnostic findings and indications, and transformer-based language models are promising for more accurate text classification.

Methods: In a retrospective study, 2256 radiologist-annotated radiology requests (8 classes) and reports (10 classes) were divided into training and testing datasets (90% and 10%, respectively) and used to train 32 models. Performance metrics were compared by model type (LSTM, Bertje, RobBERT, BERT-clinical, BERT-multilingual, BERT-base), text length, data prevalence, and training strategy.

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