British Journal of SB273005 mouse Cancer (2009) 101,
312-319. doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6605172 www.bjcancer.com Published online 30 June 2009 (C) 2009 Cancer Research UK”
“BACKGROUND. Simulation modeling call synthesize data from single-arm studies of lung cancer screening and tumor registries to investigate computed tomography (CT) screening. This study estimated changes in lung cancer outcomes through 2005, had chest CT screening been introduced in 1990.\n\nMETHODS. Hypothetical individuals with smoking histories representative of 6 US cohorts (white males and females aged 50, 60, and 70 years in 1990) were simulated in the Lung Cancer Policy Model, a comprehensive patient-level simulation model Of lung cancer development, screening, and treatment. A no screening scenario corresponded to observed outcomes. We simulated 3 screening scenarios ill current or former smokers with >= 20 pack-years as follows: 1-time screen in 1990; and annual, and twice-annually screenings beginning in 1990 and ending in 2005. Main outcomes were days of life between 1990 and 2005 and life expectancy in 1990 (estimated by simulating life histories past 2005).\n\nRESULTS. All screening scenarios yielded reductions (compared with no screening) in long cancer-specific mortality by 2005, with larger reductions predicted for more frequent
Pitavastatin in vivo screening. Compared with no screening, annual screening of ever-smokers with at least 20 pack-years of cigarette exposure provided ever-smokers with an additional 11 to 33 days of life by 2005, or all additional 3-10 weeks of (undiscounted) life expectancy. In sensitivity analyses, the largest effects on gains from annual screening were due to reductions ill screening adherence and increased smoking cessation.\n\nCONCLUSIONS. The adoption of CT screening, had it been available in 1990, might have resulted in a modest gain in life expectancy. Cancer 2008;113:3440-9. (C) 2008 American Cancer Society.”
“Xylene (a mixture of o-, m-, p-xylenes and ethylbenzene) gas removal
was conducted in the a biofilter inoculated with a mixture of the m- and p-xylene-degraders, Pseudomonas sp. NBM21 and an o-xylene degrader, Rhodococcus sp. BTO62 under non-sterile conditions at 20 degrees C. Elimination capacities of o-, m-, and p-xylenes SN-38 obtained were 180 g/m(3)/h at 20 degrees C and 100 g/m(3)/h at 10 degrees C, which were significantly higher than the 60-78 g/m(3)/h of previously reported biofilters, indicating that the two bacteria inoculated exhibited an almost total ability to remove xylene although only present in low numbers in the biofilter. In the sterile biofilter, carbon mass balance showed that 11.6% of the removed xylene was converted to cell mass. Among the xylene components, o-xylene was the most resistant to microbial degradation in spite of the low component ratio. (C) 2009, The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. All rights reserved.