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1.
BMC Infect Dis ; 20(1): 254, 2020 Mar 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32228480

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: To evaluate nasal carriage, antibiotic susceptibility and molecular characteristics of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), as well as the risk factors of MRSA colonization, in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients in northern Taiwan. METHODS: From September 2014 to November 2015, HIV-infected patients seeking outpatient care at four hospitals were eligible for this study. A nasal specimen was obtained from each subject for the detection of S. aureus and a questionnaire was completed by each subject. MRSA isolates once identified were characterized. RESULTS: Of 553 patients surveyed, methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) was detected in 119 subjects (21.5%) and MRSA in 19 subjects (3.4%). Female gender, injection drug use, smoking, hepatitis C virus carrier, cancer and antibiotic use within 1 year were positively associated with MRSA colonization. By multivariate analysis, only cancer (adjust odds ratio (aOR) 7.78, [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.909-31.731]) and antibiotic use within 1 year (aOR 3.89, [95% CI, 1.219-12.433]) were significantly associated with MRSA colonization. Ten isolates were characterized as sequence type (ST) 59/staphylococcal chromosome cassette (SCC) IV or VT, endemic community strains in Taiwan, four isolates as ST 8/SCCmec IV (USA 300) and one isolate as ST 239/SCCmec IIIA, a hospital strain. All the community-associated MRSA isolates were susceptible to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX). CONCLUSIONS: Nasal MRSA carriage in HIV-infected patients seeking outpatient care was low (3.4%) in northern Taiwan. Most of the colonizing isolates were genetically endemic community strains and exhibited high susceptibility to TMP-SMX and fluoroquinolones. Cancer and antibiotic use within 1 year were associated with MRSA colonization.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por VIH/microbiología , Staphylococcus aureus Resistente a Meticilina/efectos de los fármacos , Mucosa Nasal/microbiología , Infecciones Estafilocócicas/epidemiología , Adulto , Antibacterianos/farmacología , Femenino , Infecciones por VIH/epidemiología , Humanos , Masculino , Staphylococcus aureus Resistente a Meticilina/aislamiento & purificación , Pruebas de Sensibilidad Microbiana , Persona de Mediana Edad , Prevalencia , Factores de Riesgo , Infecciones Estafilocócicas/microbiología , Abuso de Sustancias por Vía Intravenosa/complicaciones , Taiwán/epidemiología , Combinación Trimetoprim y Sulfametoxazol/farmacología
2.
Database (Oxford) ; 20192019 01 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30753477

RESUMEN

Tracking scientific research publications on the evaluation, utility and implementation of genomic applications is critical for the translation of basic research to impact clinical and population health. In this work, we utilize state-of-the-art machine learning approaches to identify translational research in genomics beyond bench to bedside from the biomedical literature. We apply the convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and support vector machines (SVMs) to the bench/bedside article classification on the weekly manual annotation data of the Public Health Genomics Knowledge Base database. Both classifiers employ salient features to determine the probability of curation-eligible publications, which can effectively reduce the workload of manual triage and curation process. We applied the CNNs and SVMs to an independent test set (n = 400), and the models achieved the F-measure of 0.80 and 0.74, respectively. We further tested the CNNs, which perform better results, on the routine annotation pipeline for 2 weeks and significantly reduced the effort and retrieved more appropriate research articles. Our approaches provide direct insight into the automated curation of genomic translational research beyond bench to bedside. The machine learning classifiers are found to be helpful for annotators to enhance the efficiency of manual curation.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje Profundo , Genómica , Investigación Biomédica Traslacional , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Curva ROC , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estadística como Asunto , Máquina de Vectores de Soporte , Análisis y Desempeño de Tareas
3.
Database (Oxford) ; 20182018 01 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30239677

RESUMEN

In the era of data explosion, the increasing frequency of published articles presents unorthodox challenges to fulfill specific curation requirements for bio-literature databases. Recognizing these demands, we designed a document triage system with automatic methods that can improve efficiency to retrieve the most relevant articles in curation workflows and reduce workloads for biocurators. Since the BioCreative VI (2017), we have implemented texting mining processing in our system in hopes of providing higher effectiveness for curating articles related to human kinase proteins. We tested several machine learning methods together with state-of-the-art concept extraction tools. For features, we extracted rich co-occurrence and linguistic information to model the curation process of human kinome articles by the neXtProt database. As shown in the official evaluation on the human kinome curation task in BioCreative VI, our system can effectively retrieve 5.2 and 6.5 kinase articles with the relevant disease (DIS) and biological process (BP) information, respectively, among the top 100 returned results. Comparing to neXtA5, our system demonstrates significant improvements in prioritizing kinome-related articles as follows: our system achieves 0.458 and 0.109 for the DIS axis whereas the neXtA5's best-reported mean average precision (MAP) and maximum precision observed are 0.41 and 0.04. Our system also outperforms the neXtA5 in retrieving BP axis with 0.195 for MAP and the neXtA5's reported value was 0.11. These results suggest that our system may be able to assist neXtProt biocurators in practice.


Asunto(s)
Minería de Datos , Documentación , Aprendizaje Automático , Proteínas Quinasas/metabolismo , Proteoma/metabolismo , Humanos , Estadística como Asunto
4.
Database (Oxford) ; 20182018 01 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30329035

RESUMEN

The text-mining services for kinome curation track, part of BioCreative VI, proposed a competition to assess the effectiveness of text mining to perform literature triage. The track has exploited an unpublished curated data set from the neXtProt database. This data set contained comprehensive annotations for 300 human protein kinases. For a given protein and a given curation axis [diseases or gene ontology (GO) biological processes], participants' systems had to identify and rank relevant articles in a collection of 5.2 M MEDLINE citations (task 1) or 530 000 full-text articles (task 2). Explored strategies comprised named-entity recognition and machine-learning frameworks. For that latter approach, participants developed methods to derive a set of negative instances, as the databases typically do not store articles that were judged as irrelevant by curators. The supervised approaches proposed by the participating groups achieved significant improvements compared to the baseline established in a previous study and compared to a basic PubMed search.


Asunto(s)
Minería de Datos , Proteínas Quinasas/metabolismo , Bases de Datos Factuales , Humanos , Publicaciones Periódicas como Asunto
5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27278815

RESUMEN

Diseases play central roles in many areas of biomedical research and healthcare. Consequently, aggregating the disease knowledge and treatment research reports becomes an extremely critical issue, especially in rapid-growth knowledge bases (e.g. PubMed). We therefore developed a system, AuDis, for disease mention recognition and normalization in biomedical texts. Our system utilizes an order two conditional random fields model. To optimize the results, we customize several post-processing steps, including abbreviation resolution, consistency improvement and stopwords filtering. As the official evaluation on the CDR task in BioCreative V, AuDis obtained the best performance (86.46% of F-score) among 40 runs (16 unique teams) on disease normalization of the DNER sub task. These results suggest that AuDis is a high-performance recognition system for disease recognition and normalization from biomedical literature.Database URL: http://ikmlab.csie.ncku.edu.tw/CDR2015/AuDis.html.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica/normas , Biología Computacional/métodos , Minería de Datos/métodos , Minería de Datos/normas , Enfermedad , Bases de Datos Factuales , Humanos , Internet , Procesamiento de Lenguaje Natural , Vocabulario Controlado
6.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26357317

RESUMEN

Named-entity recognition (NER) plays an important role in the development of biomedical databases. However, the existing NER tools produce multifarious named-entities which may result in both curatable and non-curatable markers. To facilitate biocuration with a straightforward approach, classifying curatable named-entities is helpful with regard to accelerating the biocuration workflow. Co-occurrence Interaction Nexus with Named-entity Recognition (CoINNER) is a web-based tool that allows users to identify genes, chemicals, diseases, and action term mentions in the Comparative Toxicogenomic Database (CTD). To further discover interactions, CoINNER uses multiple advanced algorithms to recognize the mentions in the BioCreative IV CTD Track. CoINNER is developed based on a prototype system that annotated gene, chemical, and disease mentions in PubMed abstracts at BioCreative 2012 Track I (literature triage). We extended our previous system in developing CoINNER. The pre-tagging results of CoINNER were developed based on the state-of-the-art named entity recognition tools in BioCreative III. Next, a method based on conditional random fields (CRFs) is proposed to predict chemical and disease mentions in the articles. Finally, action term mentions were collected by latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA). At the BioCreative IV CTD Track, the best F-measures reached for gene/protein, chemical/drug and disease NER were 54 percent while CoINNER achieved a 61.5 percent F-measure. System URL: http://ikmbio.csie.ncku.edu.tw/coinner/ introduction.htm.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Minería de Datos/métodos , Semántica , Algoritmos , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas , Toxicogenética
7.
Database (Oxford) ; 2013: bat076, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24218542

RESUMEN

In recent years, there was a rapid increase in the number of medical articles. The number of articles in PubMed has increased exponentially. Thus, the workload for biocurators has also increased exponentially. Under these circumstances, a system that can automatically determine in advance which article has a higher priority for curation can effectively reduce the workload of biocurators. Determining how to effectively find the articles required by biocurators has become an important task. In the triage task of BioCreative 2012, we proposed the Co-occurrence Interaction Nexus (CoIN) for learning and exploring relations in articles. We constructed a co-occurrence analysis system, which is applicable to PubMed articles and suitable for gene, chemical and disease queries. CoIN uses co-occurrence features and their network centralities to assess the influence of curatable articles from the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database. The experimental results show that our network-based approach combined with co-occurrence features can effectively classify curatable and non-curatable articles. CoIN also allows biocurators to survey the ranking lists for specific queries without reviewing meaningless information. At BioCreative 2012, CoIN achieved a 0.778 mean average precision in the triage task, thus finishing in second place out of all participants. Database URL: http://ikmbio.csie.ncku.edu.tw/coin/home.php.


Asunto(s)
Minería de Datos , Documentación , Bases de Datos Factuales , Revisión de la Investigación por Pares , PubMed , Interfaz Usuario-Computador
8.
PLoS One ; 8(11): e77868, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24348899

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Determining the semantic relatedness of two biomedical terms is an important task for many text-mining applications in the biomedical field. Previous studies, such as those using ontology-based and corpus-based approaches, measured semantic relatedness by using information from the structure of biomedical literature, but these methods are limited by the small size of training resources. To increase the size of training datasets, the outputs of search engines have been used extensively to analyze the lexical patterns of biomedical terms. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this work, we propose the Mutually Reinforcing Lexical Pattern Ranking (ReLPR) algorithm for learning and exploring the lexical patterns of synonym pairs in biomedical text. ReLPR employs lexical patterns and their pattern containers to assess the semantic relatedness of biomedical terms. By combining sentence structures and the linking activities between containers and lexical patterns, our algorithm can explore the correlation between two biomedical terms. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The average correlation coefficient of the ReLPR algorithm was 0.82 for various datasets. The results of the ReLPR algorithm were significantly superior to those of previous methods.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Motor de Búsqueda/normas , Semántica , Algoritmos , Biología Computacional , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas
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