NobleBlocks

NIHR Cambridge Dementia Biomedical Research Unit

governmentCambridge, England, United Kingdom

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from NIHR Cambridge Dementia Biomedical Research Unit (United Kingdom). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
116
Citations
162
h-index
5
i10-index
4
Also known as
NIHR Cambridge Dementia Biomedical Research Unit

Top-cited papers from NIHR Cambridge Dementia Biomedical Research Unit

Physical, cognitive and mental health impacts of COVID-19 following hospitalisation – a multi-centre prospective cohort study
PHOSP-COVID Collaborative Group, Rachael A Evans, Hamish McAuley, Ewen M. Harrison +4 more
2021· medRxiv67doi:10.1101/2021.03.22.21254057

Background The impact of COVID-19 on physical and mental health, and employment following hospitalisation is poorly understood. Methods PHOSP-COVID is a multi-centre, UK, observational study of adults discharged from hospital with a clinical diagnosis of COVID-19 involving an assessment between two- and seven-months later including detailed symptom, physiological and biochemical testing. Multivariable logistic regression was performed for patient-perceived recovery with age, sex, ethnicity, body mass index (BMI), co-morbidities, and severity of acute illness as co-variates. Cluster analysis was performed using outcomes for breathlessness, fatigue, mental health, cognition and physical function. Findings We report findings of 1077 patients discharged in 2020, from the assessment undertaken a median 5 [IQR4 to 6] months later: 36% female, mean age 58 [SD 13] years, 69% white ethnicity, 27% mechanical ventilation, and 50% had at least two co-morbidities. At follow-up only 29% felt fully recovered, 20% had a new disability, and 19% experienced a health-related change in occupation. Factors associated with failure to recover were female, middle-age, white ethnicity, two or more co-morbidities, and more severe acute illness. The magnitude of the persistent health burden was substantial and weakly related to acute severity. Four clusters were identified with different severities of mental and physical health impairment: 1) Very severe (17%), 2) Severe (21%), 3) Moderate with cognitive impairment (17%), 4) Mild (46%), with 3%, 7%, 36% and 43% feeling fully recovered, respectively. Persistent systemic inflammation determined by C-reactive protein was related to cluster severity, but not acute illness severity. Interpretation We identified factors related to recovery from a hospital admission with COVID-19 and four different phenotypes relating to the severity of physical, mental, and cognitive health five months later. The implications for clinical care include the potential to stratify care and the need for a pro-active approach with wide-access to COVID-19 holistic clinical services. Funding: UKRI and NIHR

A ‘Disease Severity Index’ to identify individuals with Subjective Memory Decline who will progress to mild cognitive impairment or dementia
Daniel Ferreira, Farshad Falahati, Cecilia Linden, Rachel F. Buckley +4 more
2017· Scientific Reports28doi:10.1038/srep44368

Subjective memory decline (SMD) is a heterogeneous condition. While SMD might be the earliest sign of Alzheimer's disease (AD), it also occurs in aging and various neurological, medical, and psychiatric conditions. Identifying those with higher risk to develop dementia is thus a major challenge. We tested a novel disease severity index generated by multivariate data analysis with numerous structural MRI measures as input. The index was used to identify SMD individuals with high risk of progression to mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or AD. A total of 69 healthy controls, 86 SMD, 45 MCI, and 38 AD patients were included. Subjects were followed up for 7.5 years. Clinical, cognitive, PET amyloid imaging and APOE ε4 data were used as outcome variables. The results showed that SMD evidenced cognitive performance intermediate between healthy controls and MCI. The disease severity index identified eleven (13%) SMD individuals with an AD-like pattern of brain atrophy. These individuals showed lower cognitive performance, increased CDR-SOB, higher amyloid burden and worse clinical progression (6.2 times higher likelihood to develop MCI, dementia or die than healthy controls). The current disease severity index may have relevance for clinical practice, as well as for selecting appropriate individuals for clinical trials.

Donor-Transmitted Cancer in Orthotopic Solid Organ Transplant Recipients: A Systematic Review
George Greenhall, Maria Ibrahim, Utkarsh Dutta, Carolyn Dorée +4 more
2022· Transplant International28doi:10.3389/ti.2021.10092

Donor-transmitted cancer (DTC) has major implications for the affected patient as well as other recipients of organs from the same donor. Unlike heterotopic transplant recipients, there may be limited treatment options for orthotopic transplant recipients with DTC. We systematically reviewed the evidence on DTC in orthotopic solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs). We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science in January 2020. We included cases where the outcome was reported and excluded donor-derived cancers. We assessed study quality using published checklists. Our domains of interest were presentation, time to diagnosis, cancer extent, management, and survival. There were 73 DTC cases in liver (n = 51), heart (n = 10), lung (n = 10) and multi-organ (n = 2) recipients from 58 publications. Study quality was variable. Median time to diagnosis was 8 months; 42% were widespread at diagnosis. Of 13 cases that underwent re-transplantation, three tumours recurred. Mortality was 75%; median survival 7 months. Survival was worst in transmitted melanoma and central nervous system tumours. The prognosis of DTC in orthotopic SOTRs is poor. Although re-transplantation offers the best chance of cure, some tumours still recur. Publication bias and clinical heterogeneity limit the available evidence. From our findings, we suggest refinements to clinical practice. Systematic Review Registration: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42020165001 , Prospero Registration Number: CRD42020165001.

The interactive effect of demographic and clinical factors on hippocampal volume: A multicohort study on 1958 cognitively normal individuals
Daniel Ferreira, Oskar Hansson, José Barroso, Yaiza Molina +4 more
2017· Hippocampus25doi:10.1002/hipo.22721

Alzheimer's disease is characterized by hippocampal atrophy. Other factors also influence the hippocampal volume, but their interactive effect has not been investigated before in cognitively healthy individuals. The aim of this study is to evaluate the interactive effect of key demographic and clinical factors on hippocampal volume, in contrast to previous studies frequently investigating these factors in a separate manner. Also, to investigate how comparable the control groups from ADNI, AIBL, and AddNeuroMed are with five population-based cohorts. In this study, 1958 participants were included (100 AddNeuroMed, 226 ADNI, 155 AIBL, 59 BRC, 295 GENIC, 279 BioFiNDER, 398 PIVUS, and 446 SNAC-K). ANOVA and random forest were used for testing between-cohort differences in demographic-clinical variables. Multiple regression was used to study the influence of demographic-clinical variables on hippocampal volume. ANCOVA was used to analyze whether between-cohort differences in demographic-clinical variables explained between-cohort differences in hippocampal volume. Age and global brain atrophy were the most important variables in explaining variability in hippocampal volume. These variables were not only important themselves but also in interaction with gender, education, MMSE, and total intracranial volume. AddNeuroMed, ADNI, and AIBL differed from the population-based cohorts in several demographic-clinical variables that had a significant effect on hippocampal volume. Variability in hippocampal volume in individuals with normal cognition is high. Differences that previously tended to be related to disease mechanisms could also be partly explained by demographic and clinical factors independent from the disease. Furthermore, cognitively normal individuals especially from ADNI and AIBL are not representative of the general population. These findings may have important implications for future research and clinical trials, translating imaging biomarkers to the general population, and validating current diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's disease and predementia stages.

The complexity of biological control systems: An autophagy case study
Mariana Pavel-Tanasă, Radu Tanasa, So Jung Park, David C. Rubinsztein
2022· BioEssays5doi:10.1002/bies.202100224

Autophagy and YAP1-WWTR1/TAZ signalling are tightly linked in a complex control system of forward and feedback pathways which determine different cellular outcomes in differing cell types at different time-points after perturbations. Here we extend our previous experimental and modelling approaches to consider two possibilities. First, we have performed additional mathematical modelling to explore how the autophagy-YAP1 crosstalk may be controlled by posttranslational modifications of components of the pathways. Second, since analogous contrasting results have also been reported for autophagy as a regulator of other transduction pathways engaged in tumorigenesis (Wnt/β-catenin, TGF-β/Smads, NF-kB or XIAP/cIAPs), we have considered if such discrepancies may be explicable through situations involving competing pathways and feedback loops in different cell types, analogous to the autophagy-YAP/TAZ situation. Since distinct posttranslational modifications dominate those pathways in distinct cells, these need to be understood to enable appropriate cell type-specific therapeutic strategies for cancers and other diseases.

Solid Organ Transplantation From Deceased Donors With Infective Endocarditis: The UK Experience
George Greenhall, Matthew Robb, Chloe Brown, Rachel Johnson +3 more
2021· Transplantation4doi:10.1097/tp.0000000000003792

BACKGROUND: There is little evidence regarding the use of organs from deceased donors with infective endocarditis. We performed a retrospective analysis of the utilization, safety, and long-term survival of transplants from donors with infective endocarditis in the United Kingdom. METHODS: We studied deceased donor transplants over an 18-y period (2001-2018) using data from the UK Transplant Registry. We estimated the risk of infection transmission, defined as a microbiological isolate in the recipient matching the causative organism in the donor in the first 30 days posttransplant. We examined all-cause allograft failure up to 5 years in kidney and liver recipients, comparing transplants from donors with endocarditis with randomly selected matched control transplants. RESULTS: We studied 88 transplants from 42 donors with infective endocarditis. We found no cases of infection transmission. There was no difference in allograft failure between transplants from donors with infective endocarditis and matched control transplants, among either kidney (hazard ratio, 1.48; 95% CI, 0.66-3.34) or liver (hazard ratio, 1.14; 95% CI, 0.54-2.41) recipients. Compared with matched controls, donors with infective endocarditis donated fewer organs (2.3 versus 3.2 organs per donor; P < 0.001) and were less likely to become kidney donors (odds ratio, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.16-0.55). CONCLUSIONS: We found acceptable safety and long-term allograft survival in transplants from selected donors with infective endocarditis in the United Kingdom. This may have implications for donor selection and organ utilization.

A pilot, two-center, sequential dose escalation safety study of alteplase with fresh frozen plasma during normothermic liver perfusion
C. J.E. Watson, Stephen MacDonald, Danielle White, Chris Bridgeman +4 more
2026· Liver Transplantationdoi:10.1097/lvt.0000000000000814

Donor livers may contain occult fibrin, which is associated with adverse transplant outcomes in livers donated after brain death (DBD) and circulatory death (DCD). Ex situ normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) may allow fibrinolytic therapy before transplantation. Before undertaking a large efficacy study for the prophylaxis of cholangiopathy, we wished to assess the safety of a protocol comprising alteplase and fresh frozen plasma (FFP), the latter as a source of plasminogen, and also to ascertain which of the 4 possible treatment strategies was associated with the greatest fibrin breakdown, as judged by D-dimer release. Eighty livers, 40 DBD and 40 DCD, were randomized to 1 of 5 groups of 16 each, receiving 10 mg or 20 mg alteplase, 1 or 2 units (250 mL) of FFP, with alteplase and FFP being delivered into either the hepatic artery cannula or portal reservoir at the start of NMP. The primary endpoint was bleeding post-transplant. Forty-four of 64 treated livers were transplanted, as were 12 of the 16 control livers receiving FFP alone. There was no increase in post-implant bleeding or blood transfusion requirement of any alteplase-treated liver compared with the FFP alone control group. All 4 alteplase groups were associated with more D-dimer release than the FFP alone control group; 10 mg alteplase was as effective as 20 mg, and delivery into the portal reservoir was as effective as delivery into the hepatic artery cannula. The protocol achieving release of most D-dimers involved 10 mg alteplase being delivered directly into the portal reservoir containing 2 units of FFP. Portal delivery was found to be more straightforward than infusion into the hepatic artery cannula. The combination of alteplase with FFP appeared safe, with no bleeding complications.