Publications by authors named "D Hum"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate how age affects the performance of non-invasive tests (NITs) for detecting liver disease in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated liver disease (MASLD).* -
  • Researchers analyzed data from 1,926 individuals, focusing on a balanced cohort of 708, and found that while age influenced some NITs like FIB-4 and NFS, it didn't significantly impact the NIS2+™ test.* -
  • Results indicated that NIS2+™ effectively detected at-risk metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) across various age groups, maintaining consistent performance with specific cut-offs.*
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Background & Aims: Strategies to reduce liver biopsy (LB) screen failures through better patient selection are needed for clinical trials. Standard fibrosis biomarkers were not derived to detect "at-risk" metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH; MASH with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease score ≥4 and fibrosis stage ≥2). We compared the performance of screening pathways that incorporate NIS2+™, an optimized version of the blood-based NIS4® technology designed to identify at-risk MASH, with those incorporating fibrosis (FIB)-4 within the RESOLVE-IT clinical trial (NCT02704403), aiming for optimized selection of patients for LB.

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Background & Aims: NIS4® is a blood-based non-invasive test designed to effectively rule in/rule out at-risk non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), defined as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease activity score ≥4 and significant fibrosis (stage ≥2), among patients with metabolic risk factors. Robustness of non-invasive test scores across characteristics of interest including age, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and sex, and optimised analytical aspects are critical for large-scale implementation in clinical practice. We developed and validated NIS2+™, an optimisation of NIS4®, specifically designed to improve score robustness.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers have identified a connection between haploinsufficiency of the OTULIN gene and severe responses to staphylococcal infections in patients, leading to life-threatening necrosis.
  • This condition is similar to the symptoms seen in Cri-du-Chat syndrome, which involves a deletion on chromosome 5p.
  • The impairment from OTULIN causes an accumulation of linear ubiquitin in skin cells, leading to increased vulnerability to the staphylococcal toxin α-toxin, despite no changes in blood immune cells.
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Autosomal dominant (AD) NFKB1 deficiency is thought to be the most common genetic etiology of common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). However, the causal link between NFKB1 variants and CVID has not been demonstrated experimentally and genetically, and there has been insufficient biochemical characterization and enrichment analysis. We show that the cotransfection of NFKB1-deficient HEK293T cells (lacking both p105 and its cleaved form p50) with a κB reporter, NFKB1/p105, and a homodimerization-defective RELA/p65 mutant results in p50:p65 heterodimer-dependent and p65:p65 homodimer-independent transcriptional activation.

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