Publications by authors named "Hery C"

Objective: To examine the association between various sociodemographic factors with alcohol and tobacco use behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: Participants from Ohio and Indiana were asked to participate in the 'Impact of COVID-19 on the Cancer Continuum Consortium' study (N = 32,989) from June-November 2020. Those who completed the survey and responded to key study questions were included (n = 5,374).

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explored the link between sleep characteristics and the development of treated diabetes in postmenopausal individuals aged 50-79 years over an average follow-up of 18.1 years.
  • Results revealed that those sleeping 5 hours or less faced a 21% increased risk of diabetes compared to those sleeping 7 hours, while those sleeping 9 hours or more had a slight, non-significant increased risk.
  • Additionally, participants experiencing a decrease in sleep duration over 3 years had a 9% higher diabetes risk, and those with sleep-disordered breathing at baseline had a 31% greater risk compared to those without it.
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Huntington's disease is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by striatal neurodegeneration, aggregation of mutant Huntingtin and the presence of reactive astrocytes. Astrocytes are important partners for neurons and engage in a specific reactive response in Huntington's disease that involves morphological, molecular and functional changes. How reactive astrocytes contribute to Huntington's disease is still an open question, especially because their reactive state is poorly reproduced in experimental mouse models.

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Purpose: Short and long sleep duration and poor sleep quality are risk factors for weight gain and cancer mortality. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between sleep and weight change among postmenopausal breast cancer survivors.

Methods: Women participating in the Women's Health Initiative who were diagnosed with incident breast cancer between year one and year three were included.

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Background: Breast cancer mortality is declining in many Western countries. If mammography screening contributed to decreases in mortality, then decreases in advanced breast cancer incidence should also be noticeable.

Patients And Methods: We assessed incidence trends of advanced breast cancer in areas where mammography screening is practiced for at least 7 years with 60% minimum participation and where population-based registration of advanced breast cancer existed.

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Since 1980, sunbed use and travel abroad have dramatically increased in Iceland (64°-66°N). The authors assessed temporal trends in melanoma incidence by body site in Iceland in relation to sunbed use and travel abroad. Using joinpoint analysis, they calculated estimated annual percent changes (EAPCs) and identified the years during which statistically significant changes in EAPC occurred.

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Immediate loading of oral implants has been reported as a beneficial treatment protocol in implant dentistry that increases the comfort of the patient. However, documentation in the literature is poor regarding the clinical outcome and the peri-implant bone response of immediately loaded implants compared with the conventional loading protocol placed in different bone qualities. The aim of this report was to present the role of bone quality in the survival rate of implants using conventional or immediate loading according to the literature.

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Objective: To examine changes in temporal trends in breast cancer mortality in women living in 30 European countries.

Design: Retrospective trend analysis. Data source WHO mortality database on causes of deaths Subjects reviewed Female deaths from breast cancer from 1989 to 2006

Main Outcome Measures: Changes in breast cancer mortality for all women and by age group (<50, 50-69, and >or=70 years) calculated from linear regressions of log transformed, age adjusted death rates.

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Background: Incidence of breast cancer is rising in Asian countries, and breast cancer is the most common cancer among Asian women. However, there are few recent descriptive reports on the epidemiology of breast cancer among Eastern and Southeastern Asian populations.

Methods: We examined incidence trends for invasive breast cancer in women aged ≥20 years from 15 registries in Eastern (China, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Taiwan) and Southeastern Asia (the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand) for the period 1993-2002 mainly using data from Cancer Incidence in Five Continents, Volumes VIII and IX.

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Breast cancer risk is increasing in most Asian female populations, but little is known about the long-term mortality trend of the disease among these populations. We extracted data for Hong Kong (1979-2005), Japan (1963-2006), Korea (1985-2006), and Singapore (1963-2006) from the World Health Organization (WHO) mortality database and for Taiwan (1964-2007) from the Taiwan cancer registry. The annual age-standardized, truncated (to > or =20 years) breast cancer death rates for 11 age groups were estimated and joinpoint regression was applied to detect significant changes in breast cancer mortality.

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Purpose: We assessed changes in advanced cancer incidence and cancer mortality in eight randomized trials of breast cancer screening.

Patients And Methods: Depending on published data, advanced cancer was defined as cancer > or = 20 mm in size (four trials), stage II+ (four trials), and > or = one positive lymph node (one trial). For each trial, we obtained the estimated relative risk (RR) and 95% CI between the intervention and control groups, for both breast cancer mortality and diagnosis of advanced breast cancer.

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Age-adjusted incidence rates of breast cancer vary greatly worldwide with highest rates found in the typically 'westernised' countries of North America and Europe. Much lower rates are observed in Asian and African populations but an exception to this has been reported for the Manila Cancer Registry in the Philippines. The reason for this high rate is unknown but may be associated with the change in lifestyle that has occurred in urban Manila since the 1960s.

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Background: Since 1985 considerable changes have taken place in the early detection and treatment of breast cancer. We quantified breast cancer trends for 35 countries with populations mainly of European ancestry.

Methods: Incidence data were extracted from cancer registries and mortality data from World Health Organization database.

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Background: Mammography screening and menopause hormone therapy is essentially offered to women 50-69 years old.

Methods: In 28 European ancestry countries, we quantified changes in breast cancer incidence and mortality using a joinpoint regression analysis from 1960 until last year of available data.

Results: Since 1960, increases in incidence often in the order of 2%-3% per year occurred in all countries, mainly in women 50-69 years old whose incidence in eight countries surpassed the incidence in women 70 years old and more.

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We sought to determine the pathway of HIV-1 entry into human astrocytes and the fate of HIV-1 by detecting viral DNA and GFP-tagged HIV-1 in HIV-1-infected primary astrocytes. Immunochemistry and FACS analysis were used to assess the expression of DC-SIGN in human purified cultures of astrocytes. HIV-1 LTR was detected by PCR in infected cultures of human embryonic astrocytes at their third passage.

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An integrated network is currently being implemented in the province of Quebec in order to improve the cancer care continuum. In this context, formal trajectories for cancer patients through healthcare services are being established. The investigation of patients' perceptions of the healthcare continuum is essential as it allows us to identify the issue of continuity/discontinuity of health services.

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CXCR4, a chemokine receptor constitutively expressed in the brain, binds both ligands, the chemokine SDF-1alpha and the HIV envelope glycoprotein gp120(IIIB). There seem to be intracellular differences between the neuronal apoptosis induced by SDF-1alpha and that induced by gp120(IIIB), but the apoptotic pathways involved have not been compared in human neuronal cells. In this study, we characterized the apoptotic intracellular pathways activated by neurotoxic concentrations of SDF-1alpha and gp120(IIIB) in human neuroblastoma cells SK-N-SH.

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Our purpose was to investigate in human neurons the neuroprotective pathways induced by Fractalkine (FKN) against glutamate receptor-induced excitotoxicity. CX(3)CR1 and FKN are expressed constitutively in the tested human embryonic primary neurons and SK-N-SH, a human neuroblastoma cell line. Microfluorometry assay demonstrated that CX(3)CR1 was functional in 44% of primary neurons and in 70% of SK-N-SH.

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Within the brain, glial cells are target cells for human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and HIV. We infected cultures of unstimulated human microglial cells and astrocytes of embryonic origin and of monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) with HCMV strain AD169 and observed down-regulation of the plasma membrane expression of CCR5 in the three cell types, and of CXCR4 and CD4 in microglial cells only. Cells were then coinfected simultaneously or at a 24-h interval with both AD169 and two different HIV-1 monocytotropic strains.

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The regulation of the thyroid gland by TSH is mediated by a heterotrimeric G protein-coupled receptor. Nonthyroid effects of TSH have been reported, and expression of its receptor has been described in adipocytes and lymphocytes. We have previously reported the existence of specific and saturable binding sites of TSH and specific TSH effects in primary cultured rat brain astroglial cells.

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Objective: To compare astrocyte toxicity induced by plasma membrane-expressed gp120/41 and soluble gp120.

Design: Analysis of morphological alterations and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release from astrocytes in culture with monocytes infected with HIV-1, microglia expressing Env of a macrophage-tropic HIV-1 isolate or soluble Env.

Methods: Primary human embryonic astrocytes were cultured with: monocytes infected with two M-tropic HIV-1 isolates (HIV-1(9533), HIV-1(BX08)); human microglia infected with the defective Semliki Forest virus (SFV) vector coding for the env gene of HIV-1(BX08) isolate (SFVenvBX08); and soluble gp140 purified from baby hamster kidney cells transfected with the env gene of HIV-1(BX08) lacking the intracytoplasmic region of gp41 (SFVdelta envBX08).

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Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infects the central nervous system and plays a direct role in the pathogenesis of AIDS dementia. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying HIV-1 expression in the central nervous system are poorly understood. We have recently reported that the nuclear receptor chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription factor (COUP-TF), an orphan member of the nuclear receptor superfamily, is an activator of HIV-1 gene transcription.

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Microglial cells and astrocytes isolated from human embryonic proencephalon were compared to monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) for their ability to replicate human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) in vitro. A specific cytopathic effect was observed in microglial cells and astrocytes, but not in MDM. A high percentage of glial cells but a low percentage of MDM expressed immediate-early and late viral antigens.

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To characterize the distribution of apoptotic neurons and their relationships with the stage of disease, a history of HIV-dementia, and the degree of productive HIV infection, microglial activation and axonal damage, we examined the brains of 40 patients. Samples of frontal and temporal cortex, basal ganglia and brain stem were taken post-mortem from 20 patients with AIDS (including three with HIV-dementia, and eight with cognitive disorders that did not fulfil the criteria for HIV-dementia), 10 HIV-positive asymptomatic cases and 10 seronegative controls. Neuronal apoptosis was demonstrated by in situ end labelling in 18 AIDS cases and two pre-AIDS cases; a single apoptotic neuron was present in the temporal cortex of a control.

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