47 results match your criteria: "Kimberley Hospital[Affiliation]"

Background: Historic South African 5-year overall survival (OS) rates for Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) from 2000 to 2010 were 46% and 84% for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive and HIV-negative children, respectively. We investigated whether a harmonised treatment protocol using risk stratification and response-adapted therapy could increase the OS of childhood and adolescent HL.

Methods: Seventeen units prospectively enrolled patients less than 18 years, newly diagnosed with classical HL onto a risk-stratified, response-adapted treatment protocol from July 2016 to December 2022.

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Collaborative studies have contributed to improved survival of pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma in well-resourced settings, but few are documented in resource-constrained countries. The South Africa Children's Cancer Study Group initiated harmonization of management protocols in 2015. This article analyzes barriers and enablers of the process.

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HIV nonprogression despite persistent viremia is rare among adults who are naive to antiretroviral therapy (ART) but relatively common among ART-naive children. Previous studies indicate that ART-naive pediatric slow progressors (PSPs) adopt immune evasion strategies similar to those described in natural hosts of SIV. However, the mechanisms underlying this immunophenotype are not well understood.

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A 38-year female with no prior medical or surgical history presented with pleuritic pain and respiratory distress. Imaging revealed a right diaphragmatic hernia with colonic content. At right anterolateral thoracotomy, a diaphragmatic hernia containing a perforated right hemi-colon was found.

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Article Synopsis
  • * In a study of over 300 children with HIV in South Africa, specific HLA alleles like Bw4 and low HLA-A expression were identified as strong indicators of better immune and viral control, unlike in adults where HLA-B plays a larger role.
  • * The study also found that children with a high frequency of specific NK cell types showed better control over HIV, suggesting a potential link between immunogenetic signatures and improved outcomes in pediatric HIV cases.
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HIV-specific CD8 T cells play a central role in immune control of adult HIV, but their contribution in pediatric infection is less well characterized. Previously, we identified a group of ART-naive children with persistently undetectable plasma viremia, termed "elite controllers," and a second group who achieved aviremia only transiently. To investigate the mechanisms of failure to maintain aviremia, we characterized in three transient aviremic individuals (TAs), each of whom expressed the disease-protective HLA-B*81:01, longitudinal HIV-specific T-cell activity, and viral sequences.

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In non-specific abdominal pain, cross-sectional imaging, often valued more than clinical examination in today's technologically advanced age, may reveal a large incidentaloma, posing questions regarding its relation to symptoms and the need for surgical removal. This is a situation that highlights the potential for early detection and treatment yet raises the question as to whether surgery is indeed indicated. This report relates the case of a 79-year-old male, with a longstanding history of abdominal pain, who had a giant loose peritoneal body removed.

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Background: Data on the factors that influence mortality after surgery in South Africa are scarce, and neither these data nor data on risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality after surgery are routinely collected. Predictors related to the context or setting of surgical care delivery may also provide insight into variation in practice. Variation must be addressed when planning for improvement of risk-adjusted outcomes.

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Purpose: This report describes the rare case of a child with bilateral spontaneous anterior lens capsule ruptures as the presenting feature of Alport syndrome.

Observations: The clinical presentation, special investigations and surgical management of the child are described, accompanied by a brief discussion of the genetic basis for the ocular and systemic manifestations of Alport syndrome.

Conclusions: Bilateral spontaneous anterior lens capsule ruptures as the presenting feature of Alport syndrome has not been described before.

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Attitudes toward tobacco cessation and lung cancer screening in two South African communities.

Glob Public Health

October 2020

Non-Communicable Diseases Research (NCDR) Division of the Wits Health Consortium, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Among men in South Africa, the prevalence of tobacco smoking is as high as 33%. Although smoking is responsible for most lung cancer in South Africa, occupational and environmental exposures contribute greatly to risk. We conducted a tobacco and lung cancer screening needs assessment and administered surveys to adults who smoked >100 cigarettes in their lifetime in Johannesburg (urban) and Kimberley (rural).

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Female children and adults typically generate more efficacious immune responses to vaccines and infections than age-matched males, but also suffer greater immunopathology and autoimmune disease. We here describe, in a cohort of > 170 in utero HIV-infected infants from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, fetal immune sex differences resulting in a 1.5-2-fold increased female susceptibility to intrauterine HIV infection.

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Aneurysmal dilatation secondary to HIV vasculitis is well described being more common in patients under 45 years of age with advanced stage HIV infection (CD4 < 200 cells/µl). Tuberculous meningitis is far more common than previously anticipated with centres in Cape Town publishing that more than half of all cases of adult meningitis were secondary to tuberculosis. But aneurysmal dilatation of the cerebral vessels is exceedingly rare complication in this population.

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HBV vaccination and PMTCT as elimination tools in the presence of HIV: insights from a clinical cohort and dynamic model.

BMC Med

February 2019

Nuffield Department of Medicine, Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3SY, UK.

Background: Sustainable Development Goals set a challenge for the elimination of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection as a public health concern by the year 2030. Deployment of a robust prophylactic vaccine and enhanced interventions for prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) are cornerstones of elimination strategy. However, in light of the estimated global burden of 290 million cases, enhanced efforts are required to underpin optimisation of public health strategy.

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A 44-year-old man known to have human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection presented to our clinic with erythroderma, generalized lymphadenopathy, and cutaneous nodules and tumors. After a series of investigations, we confirmed that he had Sézary syndrome. In this paper we describe the immune alterations that occur in both Sézary Syndrome and HIV infection and how these changes together resulted in rapid and overwhelming immune dysregulation in our patient.

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Background: Children comprise a large proportion of the population in sub-Saharan Africa. The burden of paediatric surgical disease exceeds available resources in Africa, potentially increasing morbidity and mortality. There are few prospective paediatric perioperative outcomes studies, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

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Background: Reports of posttreatment control following antiretroviral therapy (ART) have prompted the question of how common immune control of HIV infection is in the absence of ART. In contrast to adult infection, where elite controllers have been very well characterized and constitute approximately 0.5% of infections, very few data exist to address this question in paediatric infection.

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Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) against HIV-1 are an effective means of preventing transmission. To better understand the mechanisms by which HIV-specific bnAbs naturally develop, we investigated blood and lymphoid tissue in pediatric infection, since potent bnAbs develop with greater frequency in children than adults. As in adults, the frequency of circulating effector T-follicular helper cells (T) in HIV infected, treatment naïve children correlates with neutralization breadth.

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Background: Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) includes disorders associated with intrauterine rubella infection. Incidence of CRS is higher in countries with no rubella-containing vaccines (RCV) in their immunization schedules. In the World Health Organization African region, RCVs are being introduced as part of the 2012-2020 global measles and rubella strategic plan.

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We have previously shown that HIV-1-infected children develop broader and more potent neutralizing antibody responses than adults. This study aimed to determine the antibody specificities in 16 HIV-1 subtype C-infected children who displayed exceptional neutralization breadth on a 22-multisubtype virus panel. All children were antiretroviral treatment (ART) naive with normal CD4 counts despite being infected for a median of 10.

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Background: The success of increasing access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) in paediatric HIV infection prompts the question of the potential for eradication of HIV infection in this age group. 'Shock-and-kill' HIV cure approaches, currently in development, may depend upon an effective antiviral T-cell response to eradicate virus-infected cells.

Method: We here investigate the ability of HIV-infected children receiving ART from early childhood (median 24 months' age) to generate effective HIV-specific CD4 and CD8 T-cell immune responses that would facilitate future immune-based cure therapies.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies indicate that children with HIV may have a higher potential for achieving a cure compared to adults due to differences in their immune response.
  • A major challenge in adults is the presence of CTL escape variants, which hinder effective immune responses, but children show the ability to generate new CTL responses even when these variants are present.
  • The immune systems of HIV-infected children can effectively adapt and respond to viral changes, suggesting they may play a key role in "shock-and-kill" strategies for HIV eradication.
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Hepatitis B virus infection as a neglected tropical disease.

PLoS Negl Trop Dis

October 2017

Nuffield Department of Medicine, Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, Oxford, United Kingdom.

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A retrospective evaluation of the Modified Alvarado Score for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis in HIV-infected patients.

Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg

April 2018

Division of General Surgery, Groote Schuur Hospital, University of Cape Town, Anzio Road, Observatory, Cape Town, 7925, Republic of South Africa.

Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare the diagnostic value of a Modified Alvarado Score (MAS) ≥7 for acute appendicitis in both Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)-negative (HIVneg) and positive (HIVpos) patientcohorts.

Methods: This retrospective study included all HIV-tested patients undergoing appendectomy at a regional hospital from March 2010 to March 2011. The MAS was calculated for all patients, as well as for the HIVneg and HIVpos groups separately.

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PARV4 prevalence, phylogeny, immunology and coinfection with HIV, HBV and HCV in a multicentre African cohort.

Wellcome Open Res

April 2017

Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, OX3 9DU, UK.

The seroprevalence of human parvovirus-4 (PARV4) varies considerably by region. In sub-Saharan Africa, seroprevalence is high in the general population, but little is known about the transmission routes or the prevalence of coinfection with blood-borne viruses, HBV, HCV and HIV.  To further explore the characteristics of PARV4 in this setting, with a particular focus on the prevalence and significance of coinfection, we screened a cohort of 695 individuals recruited from Durban and Kimberley (South Africa) and Gaborone (Botswana) for PARV4 IgG and DNA, as well as documenting HIV, HBV and HCV status.

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