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Progression Independent of Relapse Activity in Aquaporin-4-IgG–Positive NMOSDA Decade-Long Cohort Study

This study assessed the frequency of PIRA in a well-characterized cohort of patients with AQP4-IgG–positive NMOSD with over a decade of follow-up.


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The Multifaceted Paradigm of Rectal Cancer

“In a world where trimodality therapy has been the standard of care for so long, it’s remarkable to think that some of these cancers can be cured with a single systemic agent alone.”

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The world of cancer treatment is a rapidly evolving creature, and rectal cancer is no exception. In particular, locally advanced rectal cancer has a number of valid treatment options. While it’s traditionally a surgical disease, in some cases we now have evidence for watch-and-wait approaches that spare patients the morbidity and toxicity associated with oncologic resections. But even when the goal is to get the patient to a total mesorectal excision (TME), several nuances can influence decision making. Suddenly, talking to a patient about rectal cancer has become as lengthy a discussion as those we have with intermediate-risk prostate cancer patients.

We currently have good evidence to suggest that total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) should be standard of care for locally advanced rectal cancers. But even within this algorithm of chemotherapy and chemoradiation followed by surgery, questions abound. Which treatment should we start with? Which chemotherapy should be used? What radiation fractionation should we employ? And which concurrent chemotherapy should be paired with radiation? While the 5-year follow-up of the RAPIDO trial demonstrated a statistically significant increase in the locoregional recurrence rate (10% vs 6%) with short course radiation,1 this must be viewed through a critical lens, given that the two arms did not directly compare short-and long-course radiation. Perhaps it was the addition of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, delaying surgery, that resulted in a detriment to the locoregional control. Thus, short-course radiation is still indicated as a reasonable treatment option per NCCN guidelines.

Survival and Risk Profile of Patients With Significant Tricuspid Regurgitation by Etiology

Does the cause of tricuspid regurgitation (TR) affect survival?

A new analysis of nearly 13K patients finds that survival in Primary TR is better than in Secondary or Lead-associated TR. @JabbarMMS


BackgroundTricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a common valvular disorder that can affect patients’ quality of life and survival. The impact of TR etiology on overall survival and the associated risk factors in each subgroup are not well studied.

Incorporating Intensity Modulated Total Body Irradiation (IMRT-TBI) into Future Cooperative Group Clinical Trials: An NRG Hematologic Malignancies Working Group-Led Report from the National Clinical Trials Network

Read it in the RedJournal: @NRGOnc


: Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is increasingly used for total body irradiation (TBI) due to its ability to deliver myeloablative doses while sparing radiosensitive organs. To enable consistent evaluation in future National Clinical Trials Network (NCTN) studies, the xxx Hematologic Malignancies Working Group (HMWG) convened IMRT-TBI experts and NCTN leaders to develop consensus recommendations for standardized multi-institutional implementation.

Group Vs Individual Grief-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Older Adults

In a randomized clinical trial including older bereaved adults, group-format grief-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (ProlongedGriefDisorder) was noninferior to individual therapy for reducing symptoms of prolonged grief, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety at 6 months.

Both formats produced large reductions in symptom burden, suggesting either delivery method is effective for older adults seeking treatment after loss.


This study examines whether cognitive behavioral therapy delivered in a group format is noninferior to cognitive behavioral therapy delivered in an individual format in reducing prolonged grief disorder symptoms in older adults.

Humanoid robots master parkour and acquire human-like agility

Humanoid robots, robotic systems with a human-like body structure, have the potential of tackling various real-world tasks that are currently being completed by humans. In recent years, many robotics researchers and computer scientists have been trying to broaden these robots’ capabilities and improve how they move in their surroundings.

A research team at Amazon Frontier AI & Robotics (FAR) and University of California Berkeley (UC Berkeley) recently introduced perceptive humanoid parkour (PHP), a framework that could allow humanoid robots to move with remarkable agility, running, jumping and climbing over obstacles in urban or natural environments. Their proposed approach, outlined in a paper published on the arXiv preprint server, entails training computational models on recordings of humans engaging in parkour, a popular urban sport that allows practitioners to rapidly navigate environments using their agility and body strength.

“While recent advances in humanoid locomotion have achieved stable walking on varied terrains, capturing the agility and adaptivity of highly dynamic human motions remains an open challenge,” wrote Zhen Wu, Xiaoyu Huang and their colleagues in their paper.

Listening to the body’s quietest, yet most dynamic movements with a wearable sensor

The human body continuously generates a rich spectrum of vibrations—often without us ever noticing. Everyday unconscious activities such as breathing, speaking, and swallowing all produce subtle yet distinct mechanical signals. Although these faint vibrations carry valuable information about physiological state, they have long been difficult to capture accurately using conventional wearable devices.

Recently, a research team led by Professor Kilwon Cho of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), along with Ph.D. candidate Kang Hyuk Cho and postdoctoral researcher Dr. Jeng-Hun Lee, has developed a wearable vibration sensor capable of precisely detecting these subtle yet highly dynamic signals, without requiring any external power source. This breakthrough opens new possibilities for wearable medical and health care technologies and demonstrates strong potential as a core sensing platform for next-generation smart devices. The work was published in the inaugural issue of Nature Sensors.

Sounds produced by the human body span a wide range of frequencies. Physiological signals such as breathing, swallowing, and speech typically occur at lower frequencies, while sounds such as coughing or groaning emerge at relatively higher frequencies. Accurately capturing these signals requires precise detection of the minute vibrations transmitted to the skin surface across a broad frequency spectrum.

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