Genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection is the leading cause of bacterial sexually transmitted disease in industrialised countries, particularly among young people. The consequences of chlamydial infection may involve urethritis, cervicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, tubal factor infertility, epididymitis and prostatitis. In addition, chlamydial infection increases the risk of acquisition of human immunodeficiency virus and has been associated with cervical cancer. Although screening programmes exist in a number of countries, the continuously increasing prevalence of chlamydial infections demonstrates the necessity for health authorities to establish effective screening policies, and the importance of defining a comprehensive European screening policy is emerging.
Detection of alloreactive anti-HLA antibodies is a frequent and mandatory test before and after organ transplantation to determine the antigenic targets of the antibodies. Nowadays, this test involves the measurement of fluorescent signals generated through antibody–antigen reactions on multi-beads flow cytometers. In this study, in a cohort of 1,066 patients from one country, anti-HLA class I responses were analyzed on a panel of 98 different antigens. Knowing that the immune system responds typically to “shared” antigenic targets, we studied the clustering patterns of antibody responses against HLA class I antigens without any a priori hypothesis, applying two unsupervised machine learning approaches. At first, the principal component analysis (PCA) projections of intra-locus specific responses showed that anti-HLA-A and anti-HLA-C were the most distantly projected responses in the population with the anti-HLA-B responses to be projected between them. When PCA was applied on the responses against antigens belonging to a single locus, some already known groupings were confirmed while several new cross-reactive patterns of alloreactivity were detected. Anti-HLA-A responses projected through PCA suggested that three cross-reactive groups accounted for about 70% of the variance observed in the population, while anti-HLA-B responses were mainly characterized by a distinction between previously described Bw4 and Bw6 cross-reactive groups followed by several yet undocumented or poorly described ones. Furthermore, anti-HLA-C responses could be explained by two major cross-reactive groups completely overlapping with previously described C1 and C2 allelic groups. A second feature-based analysis of all antigenic specificities, projected as a dendrogram, generated a robust measure of allelic antigenic distances depicting bead-array defined cross reactive groups. Finally, amino acid combinations explaining major population specific cross-reactive groups were described. The interpretation of the results was based on the current knowledge of the antigenic targets of the antibodies as they have been characterized either experimentally or computationally and appear at the HLA epitope registry.
Genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection is the principal cause of bacterial sexually transmitted disease in industrialized countries. A wide spectrum of pathologic conditions has been associated with the disease ranging from urethritis, cervicitis, to pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, tubal infertility and cervical neoplasia. Screening for genital Chlamydia infection may prevent its serious complications. The need of a comprehensive European screening policy has been recently underlined by PACMeR's scientific committee. Anyhow invitational screening programs are only at the beginning. Chlamydia trachomatis control ''orphan'' and women's health at risk. Until organized programs are developed, implementation of opportunistic screening is mandatory. Since the infection is more commonly observed among juvenile females proper testing of the young women is recommended. As asymptomatic young women in reproductive age are more eager to visit gynaecologists for periodical gynaecological examination and councelling (cervical cytology, breast examination, contraception and family planning), gynaecologist represents the only specialist able to provide early diagnosis of Chlamydia trachomatis. Gynaecologists are called to play a new role in public healthcare, being ''gatekeepers'' for the early detection of the disease, emphasizing their crucial part in young women's health.
Tumour markers are neither sensitive nor specific enough for cancer screening. Despite established guidelines, tumour marker 'screening myth' may be alive among physicians, but no study has analysed the phenomenon. This study aims to investigate tumour marker recommendation for screening purposes in primary care setting. A total of 209 Hellenic physicians were surveyed for screening activities by a multiple-choice questionnaire. Data were abstracted for the following tumour marker recommendations: carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA); cancer antigens 19.9, 125 and 15.3; alpha-fetoprotein and beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-HCG). A high rate of physicians advocate that tumour markers in cancer screening (range from 24% for beta-HCG to 46% for CEA). This phenomenon is not related to age, sex, type and level of physicians' specialization. In conclusion, many physicians recommend tumour markers for screening purposes. This may be harmful, since their prescriptions unnecessarily burden health economics, and further evaluation of false-positive findings might be associated with increased costs and risk from additional diagnostic/therapeutic interventions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.