Recent Publications
H Bishara, A Saffouri, D Weiler-Ravell: Ongoing tuberculosis transmission among second-generation Ethiopian immigrants in Israel (Epidemiol Infect)
Despite considerable efforts to control tuberculosis (TB) among Ethiopian immigrants in Israel, an outbreak of TB among second-generation Ethiopian immigrants that also involved native Israelis occurred between January 2011 and December 2019. The aim of this article is to report on this outbreak and discuss the patient and health system barriers that led to its propagation.
Netta R Blondheim Shraga: Identification of Tumor Antigens in the HLA Peptidome of Patient-derived Xenograft Tumors in Mouse (Mol Cell Proteomics . )
Personalized cancer immunotherapy targeting patient-specific cancer/testis antigens (CTA) and neoantigens may benefit from large-scale tumor human leukocyte antigen (HLA) peptidome (immunopeptidome) analysis, which aims to accurately identify antigens presented by tumor cells. Although significant efforts have been invested in analyzing the HLA peptidomes of fresh tumors, it is often impossible to obtain sufficient volumes of tumor tissues for comprehensive HLA peptidome characterization. This work attempted to overcome some of these obstacles by using patient-derived xenograft tumors (PDX) in mice as the tissue sources for HLA peptidome analysis.
Najib Dally: The impact of anti-bacterial prophylaxis on the outcome of patients treated with venetoclax-based regimens for relapsed/refractory plasma cell dyscrasias: Real-life data (Leuk Res .)
The current retrospective study evaluated safety and efficacy of venetoclax-based combinations in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM/RR) amyloidosis (AL) and the role of anti-infection prophylaxis in the real-life setting.
Raymond Farah, Mais Nassar, Bayan Aboraya, William Nseir: Low serum potassium levels are associated with the risk of atrial fibrillation (Acta Cardiol . )
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia in clinical practice. AF is associated with approximately a threefold to fivefold increased risk for stroke. Hypokalaemia is associated with ventricular arrhythmias and cardiac arrest. Little is known about the association of serum potassium with atrial fibrillation. The aims of this study are to assess the association of low serum potassium (hypokalaemia) and the risk of AF.
Wisam Sbeit, Anas Kadah, Amir Mari, Tawfik Khoury: Unawareness of thromboprophylaxis is associated with low venous thromboembolism occurrence in hospitalized patients with acute inflammatory bowel disease flare (Minerva Med . )
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a set of chronic inflammatory diseases associated with significant morbidity. Generally, IBD patients have twice the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) compared to healthy controls. VTE can occur both, during hospital stay or after discharge. We aimed to assess the incidence among IBD patients who were hospitalized for disease exacerbation.
Evan Elliott: The National Autism Database of Israel: a Resource for Studying Autism Risk Factors, Biomarkers, Outcome Measures, and Treatment Efficacy (J Mol Neurosci)
ASD is a neurodevelopmental disorder that is defined by impairments in social communication, restricted interests, and repetitive behaviors (American Psychiatric Association 2013). Despite the unitary definition, individuals with ASD exhibit a wide variety of different core and secondary symptoms, which include dramatic differences in the level of adaptive behaviors, language, and cognitive abilities. This heterogeneity suggests that the ASD diagnostic category includes a variety of distinct disorders (Happé et al. 2006) that develop due to different causes (State and Levitt 2011; Jeste and Geschwind 2014) and are likely to require different interventions and therapies (Zwaigenbaum et al. 2015).
Consequently, conducting ASD research with small groups of participants in isolated laboratories yields findings that are not likely to be replicated across sites. The alternative, which has gained considerable momentum over the last decade, is to develop collaborative research efforts that involve identical data collection at multiple sites and the establishment of a common shared database. Such efforts enable data collection from a larger number of participants who are more likely to represent the true heterogeneity of ASD characteristics in the community. This approach can, therefore, enable researchers to pursue a personalized medicine approach with the goal of dividing the heterogeneous population into distinct subgroups that share specific phenotypic features, etiologies and/or treatment response patterns. These efforts are considerably more difficult and expensive to establish, and require multidisciplinary collaboration.
Wisam Sbeit, Anas Kadah, Amir Mari, Tawfik Khoury: A State-of-the-Art Review on the Evolving Utility of Endoscopic Ultrasound in Liver Diseases Diagnosis (Diagnostics (Basel) .)
Liver diseases are amongst the most common diseases worldwide and manifest as a parenchymatic and/or biliary injury due to several causes as well as focal liver lesions, ranging from benign to malignant ones. The diagnosis of liver diseases is based mainly on biochemical and advanced imaging studies and, when required, on liver biopsy. Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), which combines endoscopy and ultrasonography, is one of the main examination techniques used in gastroenterology as it is applied to evaluate abnormalities in the lumen of the upper and lower gastrointestinal tract and to define pancreatic and hepato-biliary features, often in chronic patients. Given its high spatial resolution and its proximity to the liver, EUS is gaining popularity in the diagnostic work up of liver diseases. This is a comprehensive overview of the current literature on the diagnostic indications for EUS use in patients with liver diseases.
Dmitry Tworowski, Alessandro Gorohovski, Milana Frenkel Morgenstern: Low plasma 25(OH) vitamin D level is associated with increased risk of COVID-19 infection: an Israeli population-based study (FEBS J .)
Evaluates associations of plasma 25(OH)D status with the likelihood of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) infection and hospitalization.
Michal Leshem, Nir Qvit: Approach for comparing protein structures and origami models - Part 2. Multi-domain proteins (Biochim Biophys Acta Biomembr .)
Protein structure is an important field of research, with particular significance in its potential applications in biomedicine and nanotechnology. In a recent study, we presented a general approach for comparing protein structures and origami models and demonstrated it with one-domain proteins. For example, the analysis of the α-helical barrel of the outer membrane protein A (OmpA) suggests that there are similar patterns between its structure and the Kresling origami model, providing insight into structure-activity relationships. Here we demonstrate that our approach can be expanded beyond single-domain proteins to also include multi-domain proteins, and to study dynamic processes of biomolecules.
Tawfik Khoury, Anas Kadah, Amir Mari, Bahir Sirhan, Wisam Sbeit: The Utility of Endoscopic Ultrasound Fine Needle Aspiration in Pancreatic Cystic Lesions Diagnosis (Diagnostics (Basel) . )
The yield of biochemical analysis of pancreatic cysts fluid obtained via fine needle aspiration (FNA) is limited. We aimed to assess whether biochemical cyst analysis correlates with the endoscopic ultra-sonographic (EUS) diagnosis.
Clinical, Surgical, and Socio-Psychological Factors and Depression Post-Cardiothoracic Surgery (Ann Thorac Surg .)
Depression is highly prevalent in cardiac surgical patients and is associated with mortality. The objectives of the study were to evaluate depression scores longitudinally pre- and post-operatively and to examine the association between post-operative depression scores and clinical, surgical, and socio-psychological factors. (Noa Caspi-Avissar, Liza Grosman-Rimon, Dina Granot, Diab Ghanim, Shemy Carasso, Amjad Shalabi, Doron Sudarsky, Wadi Kinany, Offer Amir, Erez Kachel)
Esther Levi, Ohad Ronen: Community Clinic and Emergency Department Physicians' Adherence to Acute Pharyngitis Antibiotic Treatment Guidelines (Eur J Clin Invest . )
Antibiotic treatment guidelines for common infectious diseases enable proper diagnosis and treatment and avoid unnecessary antibiotic treatment, preventing both financial expenditure and antimicrobial resistance to antibiotics. The aim of our study was to investigate whether community physicians referring patients to the medical center and whether emergency department (ED) physicians diagnose and treat acute pharyngitis according to these guidelines.
Elon Glassberg, Ronny Ben-Avi, Moshe Matan, Avi Benov: Clinical Course and Outcomes of Severe Covid-19: A National Scale Study (J Clin Med .)
Knowledge of the outcomes of critically ill patients is crucial for health and government officials who are planning how to address local outbreaks. The factors associated with outcomes of critically ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) who required treatment in an intensive care unit (ICU) are yet to be determined. This was a retrospective registry-based case series of patients with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 who were referred for ICU admission and treated in the ICUs of the 13 participating centers in Israel between 5 March and 27 April 2020. Demographic and clinical data including clinical management were collected and subjected to a multivariable analysis; primary outcome was mortality.
COG6-CDG: Expanding the Phenotype with emphasis on glycosylation defects involved in the causation of Male Disorders of Sex Development (Clin Genet .)
COG6-congenital disorder of glycosylation (COG6-CDG) is caused by biallelic mutations in COG6. To-date, 12 variants causing COG6-CDG in less than 20 patients have been reported. Using whole exome sequencing we identified two siblings with a novel homozygous deletion of 26 bp in COG6, creating a splicing variant (c.518_540 + 3del) and a shift in the reading frame. The phenotype of COG6-CDG includes growth and developmental retardation, microcephaly, liver and gastrointestinal disease, hypohydrosis and recurrent infections. We report two patients with novel phenotypic features including bowel malrotation and ambiguous genitalia, directing attention to the role of glycoprotein metabolism in the causation of disorders of sex development (DSD). Searching the glycomic literature, we identified 14 CDGs including males with DSD, a feature not previously accentuated. This study broadens the genetic and phenotypic spectrum of COG6-CDG and calls for increasing awareness to the central role of glycosylation processes in development of human sex and genitalia. (Hanna Mandel, Nehama Cohen Kfir, Ayalla Fedida, Efrat Shuster Biton, Marwan Odeh, Limor Kalfon, Shani Ben Harouch, Vered Sheffer Fleischer, Yoav Hoffman, Liat Apel-Sarid, Tzipora C Falik-Zaccai)
Igor Waksman, Evgeny Solomonov: Implementing a Practical Global Health Curriculum: The Benefits and Challenges of Patient-Based Learning in the Community (Front Public Health . )
A growing number of medical schools across the world have incorporated global health (GH) into their curricula. While several schools focus GH education on lecture-based courses, our premise is that global health education should embody a holistic approach to patient care and medical education in local communities. Medical students may learn global health by focusing on real patients, their families and communities as part of a practical curriculum.
A unique GH curriculum was devised to compare student learning outcomes on a practical vs. lecture-based course. The premise was that learning from patients would result in a greater breadth of coverage of the global health syllabus as compared to that from a lecture-based course.