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Publicações

Publicações por LIAAD

2020

Integrative pathway enrichment analysis of multivariate omics data

Autores
Paczkowska, M; Barenboim, J; Sintupisut, N; Fox, NS; Zhu, H; Abd Rabbo, D; Mee, MW; Boutros, PC; Abascal, F; Amin, SB; Bader, GD; Beroukhim, R; Bertl, J; Boroevich, KA; Brunak, S; Campbell, PJ; Carlevaro Fita, J; Chakravarty, D; Chan, CWY; Chen, K; Choi, JK; Deu Pons, J; Dhingra, P; Diamanti, K; Feuerbach, L; Fink, JL; Fonseca, NA; Frigola, J; Gambacorti Passerini, C; Garsed, DW; Gerstein, M; Getz, G; Gonzalez Perez, A; Guo, Q; Gut, IG; Haan, D; Hamilton, MP; Haradhvala, NJ; Harmanci, AO; Helmy, M; Herrmann, C; Hess, JM; Hobolth, A; Hodzic, E; Hong, C; Hornshøj, H; Isaev, K; Izarzugaza, JMG; Johnson, R; Johnson, TA; Juul, M; Juul, RI; Kahles, A; Kahraman, A; Kellis, M; Khurana, E; Kim, J; Kim, JK; Kim, Y; Komorowski, J; Korbel, JO; Kumar, S; Lanzós, A; Lawrence, MS; Lee, D; Lehmann, KV; Li, S; Li, X; Lin, Z; Liu, EM; Lochovsky, L; Lou, S; Madsen, T; Marchal, K; Martincorena, I; Martinez Fundichely, A; Maruvka, YE; McGillivray, PD; Meyerson, W; Muiños, F; Mularoni, L; Nakagawa, H; Nielsen, MM; Park, K; Park, K; Pedersen, JS; Pich, O; Pons, T; Pulido Tamayo, S; Raphael, BJ; Reyes Salazar, I; Reyna, MA; Rheinbay, E; Rubin, MA; Rubio Perez, C; Sabarinathan, R; Sahinalp, SC; Saksena, G; Salichos, L; Sander, C; Schumacher, SE; Shackleton, M; Shapira, O; Shen, C; Shrestha, R; Shuai, S; Sidiropoulos, N; Sieverling, L; Sinnott Armstrong, N; Stein, LD; Stuart, JM; Tamborero, D; Tiao, G; Tsunoda, T; Umer, HM; Uusküla Reimand, L; Valencia, A; Vazquez, M; Verbeke, LPC; Wadelius, C; Wadi, L; Wang, J; Warrell, J; Waszak, SM; Weischenfeldt, J; Wheeler, DA; Wu, G; Yu, J; Zhang, J; Zhang, X; Zhang, Y; Zhao, Z; Zou, L; von Mering, C; Reimand, J;

Publicação
Nature Communications

Abstract
Multi-omics datasets represent distinct aspects of the central dogma of molecular biology. Such high-dimensional molecular profiles pose challenges to data interpretation and hypothesis generation. ActivePathways is an integrative method that discovers significantly enriched pathways across multiple datasets using statistical data fusion, rationalizes contributing evidence and highlights associated genes. As part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium, which aggregated whole genome sequencing data from 2658 cancers across 38 tumor types, we integrated genes with coding and non-coding mutations and revealed frequently mutated pathways and additional cancer genes with infrequent mutations. We also analyzed prognostic molecular pathways by integrating genomic and transcriptomic features of 1780 breast cancers and highlighted associations with immune response and anti-apoptotic signaling. Integration of ChIP-seq and RNA-seq data for master regulators of the Hippo pathway across normal human tissues identified processes of tissue regeneration and stem cell regulation. ActivePathways is a versatile method that improves systems-level understanding of cellular organization in health and disease through integration of multiple molecular datasets and pathway annotations. © 2020, The Author(s).

2020

Speeding up the detection of invasive aquatic species using environmental DNA and nanopore sequencing

Autores
Egeter, B; Veríssimo, J; Lopes-Lima, M; Chaves, C; Pinto, J; Riccardi, N; Beja, P; Fonseca, NA;

Publicação

Abstract
AbstractTraditional detection of aquatic invasive species, via morphological identification is often time-consuming and can require a high level of taxonomic expertise, leading to delayed mitigation responses. Environmental DNA (eDNA) detection approaches of multiple species using Illumina-based sequencing technology have been used to overcome these hindrances, but sample processing is often lengthy. More recently, portable nanopore sequencing technology has become available, which has the potential to make molecular detection of invasive species more widely accessible and to substantially decrease sample turnaround times. However, nanopore-sequenced reads have a much higher error rate than those produced by Illumina platforms, which has so far hindered the adoption of this technology. We provide a detailed laboratory protocol and bioinformatic tools to increase the reliability of nanopore sequencing to detect invasive species, and we test its application using invasive bivalves. We sampled water from sites with pre-existing bivalve occurrence and abundance data, and contrasting bivalve communities, in Italy and Portugal. We extracted, amplified and sequenced eDNA with a turnaround of 3.5 days. The majority of processed reads were = 99 % identical to reference sequences. There were no taxa detected other than those known to occur. The lack of detections of some species at some sites could be explained by their known low abundances. This is the first reported use of MinION to detect aquatic invasive species from eDNA samples. The approach can be easily adapted for other metabarcoding applications, such as biodiversity assessment, ecosystem health assessment and diet studies.

2020

Tumour gene expression signature in primary melanoma predicts long-term outcomes: A prospective multicentre study

Autores
Garg, M; Couturier, D; Nsengimana, J; Fonseca, NA; Wongchenko, M; Yan, Y; Lauss, M; Jönsson, GB; Newton-Bishop, J; Parkinson, C; Middleton, MR; Bishop, T; Corrie, P; Adams, DJ; Brazma, A; Rabbie, R;

Publicação

Abstract
AbstractPurposePredicting outcomes after resection of primary melanoma remains crude, primarily based on tumour thickness. We explored gene expression signatures for their ability to better predict outcomes.MethodsDifferential expression analysis of 194 primary melanomas resected from patients who either developed distant metastasis (n=89) or did not (n=105) was performed. We identified 121 metastasis-associated genes that were included in our prognostic signature, “Cam_121”. Several machine learning classification models were trained using nested leave- one-out cross validation (LOOCV) to test the signature’s capacity to predict metastases, as well as regression models to predict survival. The prognostic accuracy was externally validated in two independent datasets.ResultsCam_121 performed significantly better in predicting distant metastases than any of the models trained with the clinical covariates alone (pAccuracy=4.92×10-3), as well as those trained with two published prognostic signatures. Cam_121 expression score was strongly associated with progression-free survival (HR=1.7, p=3.44×10-6), overall survival (HR=1.73, p=7.71×10-6) and melanoma-specific survival (HR=1.59, p=0.02). Cam_121 expression score also negatively correlated with measures of immune cell infiltration (?=-0.73, p<2.2×10-16), with a higher score representing reduced tumour lymphocytic infiltration and a higher absolute 5-year risk of death in stage II melanoma.ConclusionsThe Cam_121 primary melanoma gene expression signature outperformed currently available alternatives in predicting the risk of distant recurrence. The signature confirmed (using unbiased approaches) the central prognostic importance of immune cell infiltration in long-term patient outcomes and could be used to identify stage II melanoma patients at highest risk of metastases and poor survival who might benefit most from adjuvant therapies.Translational relevancePredicting outcomes after resection of primary melanoma is currently based on traditional histopathological staging, however survival outcomes within these disease stages varies markedly. Since adjuvant systemic therapies are now being used routinely, accurate prognostic information is needed to better risk stratify patients and avoid unnecessary use of high cost, potentially harmful drugs, as well as to inform future adjuvant strategies. The Cam_121 gene expression signature appears to have this capability and warrants evaluation in prospective clinical trials.

2020

Simulation of the effects of COVID-19 testing rates on hospitalizations

Autores
Sousa Pinto, B; Fonseca, JA; Oliveira, B; Cruz Correia, R; Rodrigues, PP; Costa Pereira, A; Rocha Goncalves, FN;

Publicação
BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

Abstract

2020

Reviewing Autoencoders for Missing Data Imputation: Technical Trends, Applications and Outcomes

Autores
Pereira, RC; Santos, MS; Rodrigues, PP; Abreu, PH;

Publicação
J. Artif. Intell. Res.

Abstract

2020

Outcomes of managing healthcare services using the Theory of Constraints: A systematic review

Autores
Bacelar Silva, GM; Cox, JF; Rodrigues, PP;

Publicação
HEALTH SYSTEMS

Abstract
Despite ever-increasing resources devoted to healthcare, lack of capacity and timeliness are still chronic problems worldwide. This systematic review aims to present an overview of the Theory of Constraints (TOC) implementations in healthcare services and their outcomes. We analysed 42 TOC implementations (15 full-text articles, 12 video proceedings, and 2 theses/disserations) from major scientific electronic databases and TOC International Certification Organization Conferences. All implementations reported positive outcomes, both tangible and intangible. The two main improvements reported by authors were in productivity (98%; n = 41) - more patients treated - and in the timeliness of care (83%; n = 35). Furthermore, the selected studies reported dramatic improvements: 50% mean reductions in patient waiting time; 38% reduction in patient length of stay; 43% mean increase in operating room productivity and 34% mean increase in throughput. TOC implementations attained positive results in all levels of the health and social care chain. Most TOC recommendations and changes showed almost immediate results and required little or no additional cost to implement. Evidence supports TOC as a promising solution for the chronic healthcare problem, improving quality and timeliness, both necessary conditions for providing effective healthcare.

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