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#lymphoma #cancer #MEDMASTODON
@majorajay #lymsm

Pembrolizumab
(pem-broh-LIH-zoo-mab)

... an immune checkpoint inhibitor that binds to the protein PD-1 on the surface of certain immune cells called T cells, which keeps cancer cells from suppressing the immune system.

in Relapsed or Refractory Primary Mediastinal Large B-Cell Lymphoma: Final Analysis

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/371300

"Achieving a 50% reduction in cancer mortality in 25 years will be impossible without addressing cancer health equity. Many populations experience health inequities, including people from some racial and ethnic minority groups, people with disabilities, women, people who are LGBTQI+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, or other), people with limited English proficiency, and people living in rural location"

aacrjournals.org/cancerdiscove

On the art of nonfiction, David Shenk.

This article and its 3 challenges to writing nonfiction resonates with me. As a scientist, it also highlights the difference between scientific practice versus science writing of other types (with a surprising insight for science).

The second challenge is the one that both scientists and science writers do a lot of: figuring out how to navigate complex information. It's the core of the job, whether you are doing science or writing about it.

The first challenge is the one that most scientist don't do much of: storytelling science. For the scientists that want to do it, that's great. But it's also really hard. While tremendously valuable to the whole, I'm not sure it turns individuals into better scientists; it's a different (valuable!) thing. Of the 3 challenges, this one differentiates science writers vs scientists, I think. (The analog in science would be the experiments and such).

The third challenge is the one that is less obvious: Stepping back from the trees to view the forest from 10,000 feet to get a fresh perspective. I agree with Shenk that most scientists don't do it. It's one I'd like to see more scientists engage in; I suspect it would lead to better science.

#writing #nonfiction

theatlantic.com/national/archi

O diretor da Human Rights Watch disse que "as informações sobre pessoas detidas por protestos pacíficos contra a coroação [do rei] são incrivelmente alarmantes" e que "isto é algo que se esperaria ver em Moscovo, não em Londres".

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/joseggusmao/s

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John le Carré did not appreciate Clive James' reviews. (from "A Private Spy. The letters of John le Carré", edited by Tim Cornwell).

I wrote about RSV vaccines in my column in February.
Very good news this week with the FDA approval of GSK's RSV vaccine for adults 60 and over - it's the first approved RSV vaccine.

edition.cnn.com/2023/05/03/hea

Several other candidate RSV vaccines are at a late stage of development, including mRNA based vaccines. The next big thing to watch for are those seeking to protect newborns and infants by maternal immunisation.

nature.com/articles/d41591-023

'We now provide compelling evidence that in hypoxic conditions, an autocrine IL-24/IL-24-receptor signaling/STAT3 loop is induced, which then sustains the HIF1α-mediated expression of epidermal IL-24. In turn, IL-24 acts in an autocrine and paracrine fashion to coordinate re-epithelialization, re-vascularization, dermal fibroblast proliferation, and collagen deposition to restore the damaged tissue to homeostasis.'
Liu, @mucida, Fuchs et al

cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8

@mucida The paper also has a very interesting evolutionary scenario

"Unbiased phylogenetic analyses indicated that this family and its receptors28 share greater sequence/structure homology to IFN and IFN-receptors than other cytokines/cytokine-receptors (Figures S1A and S1B; Table S3). Notably, the heterodimeric receptor subunits of the IFN and IL-10 families also sub-clustered, suggestive of a common ancestral heterodimeric receptor specific to these two families (Figure S1B). In contrast to IFNs, however, the IL-10 cytokine family has not been as clearly linked to pathogens/danger signals. This raises the tantalizing possibility that, during evolution, these pathways may have bifurcated from a common ancestor to cope with the increasing diversity of pathogens and injuries."

cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8

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Inspired by Kate Raworth's Doughnut Economics, Anne Urai and Clare Kelly imagine an ‘academic doughnut’ for rethinking academia for climate action.

🎧 Listen in the #eLifePodcast
elifesciences.org/podcast/epis

'In this Essay, we discuss recent findings related to changes in the metabolic functions of immune cells (immunometabolism), particularly mitochondrial dysfunction, in innate and adaptive immune cells and their contribution to the generation of autoimmunity, with emphasis on systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA)'

journals.plos.org/plosbiology/

Variation is key to the SARS-CoV-2 ‘waves’
-a new blog piece by me. If you like, please amplify by reposting.
virologydownunder.com/variatio

Excess deaths align with COVID-19.
-a second blog from me, and I in one day! Please tell me re-postmboost this if you read and enjoyed.
virologydownunder.com/excess-d

STM is looking for an editor with experience in cardiovascular/vascular research.

'The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and Science Translational Medicine are seeking a talented scientist, physician scientist or clinician interested in biomedical/translational research to join the Science Translational Medicine editorial team, preferably in our Washington, DC, USA or Cambridge, UK offices.'

aaas.org/careers/senior-editor

'Reconvertir el viñedo en ecológico significa que todas las prácticas como el abonado, con productos fitosanitarios contra las plagas de la viña y la erradicación de malas hierbas, se ajustan a la legislación ecológica. Este plan obedece, según la enóloga de la bodega, Elisa Ludeña, a la responsabilidad que existe por parte de la propiedad en “cuanto al cuidado del suelo y de la biodiversidad y a la restricción del uso de productos químicos de síntesis”.

elpais.com/gastronomia/2023-05

'In a section that suggests those closest to Johnson at the time have been obliging in spilling the beans, Seldon describes how Johnson, digesting the results at his London home, “paced around in a Brazilian football shirt and bottom-hugging shorts looking ashen-faced and distraught”. A new thought struck him: “Oh s**t, we’ve got no plan. We haven’t thought about it. I didn’t think it would happen. Holy crap, what will we do?”

ft.com/content/4288182d-db70-4

#CharlieSausageFingersGoldenHatParade #Coronation
Monty Python: "Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government…"
The Royal Family:

"Berners-Lee eventually convinced CERN to release the World Wide Web into the public domain without any patents or fees. He has since attributed the runaway success of the web to that single decision."

30 years ago, one decision altered the course of our connected world

npr.org/2023/04/30/1172276538/

'The EU is ready to agree that immediate open access to papers reporting publicly funded research should become the norm, without authors having to pay fees, and that the bloc should support non-profit scholarly publishing models.'

researchprofessionalnews.com/r

Molecular atlas for Crohn's disease & ulcerative colitis in patients receiving anti-TNF.

'We describe a therapeutic atlas for Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) following anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) therapy. We generated ~1 million single-cell transcriptomes, organised into 109 cell states, from 216 gut biopsies from 38 patients and three controls, revealing disease- and therapy-specific differences.'

biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20

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