ELIZA cgi-bash version rev. 1.91
- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for significantly out of >500 occurrences
583352 occurrences (No.14 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [no cache] 500 found
240) Cellular deconvolution using single-cell RNA-sequencing data identified natural killer cells as significantly correlated with progression.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:33689671 DOI:10.1164/rccm.202008-3093OC
2021 American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
* Blood Transcriptomics Predicts Progression of Pulmonary Fibrosis and Associated Natural Killer Cells.
- Rationale: Disease activity in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) remains highly variable, poorly understood, and difficult to predict. Objectives: To identify a predictor using short-term longitudinal changes in gene expression that forecasts future FVC decline and to characterize involved pathways and cell types. Methods: Seventy-four patients from COMET (Correlating Outcomes with Biochemical Markers to Estimate Time-Progression in IPF) cohort were dichotomized as progressors (≥10% FVC decline) or stable. Blood gene-expression changes within individuals were calculated between baseline and 4 months and regressed with future FVC status, allowing determination of expression variations, sample size, and statistical power. Pathway analyses were conducted to predict downstream effects and identify new targets. An FVC predictor for progression was constructed in COMET and validated using independent cohorts. Peripheral blood mononuclear single-cell RNA-sequencing data from healthy control subjects were used as references to characterize cell type compositions from bulk peripheral blood mononuclear RNA-sequencing data that were associated with FVC decline. Measurements and Main Results: The longitudinal model reduced gene-expression variations within stable and progressor groups, resulting in increased statistical power when compared with a cross-sectional model. The FVC predictor for progression anticipated patients with future FVC decline with 78% sensitivity and 86% specificity across independent IPF cohorts. Pattern recognition receptor pathways and mTOR pathways were downregulated and upregulated, respectively. Cellular deconvolution using single-cell RNA-sequencing data identified natural killer cells as significantly correlated with progression. Conclusions: Serial transcriptomic change predicts future FVC decline. An analysis of cell types involved in the progressor signature supports the novel involvement of natural killer cells in IPF progression.
--- ABSTRACT END ---
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[frequency of next (right) word to significantly]
(1)44 higher (17)6 with (33)4 in (49)2 faster
(2)35 increased (18)5 and (34)4 suppressed (50)2 increases
(3)33 associated (19)5 better (35)3 (p (51)2 influence
(4)25 reduced (20)5 enhanced (36)3 change (52)2 inhibit
(5)20 lower (21)5 enriched (37)3 diminished (53)2 larger
(6)19 decreased (22)5 less (38)3 increase (54)2 lowered
(7)15 different (23)5 related (39)3 longer (55)2 modified
(8)14 more (24)4 *null* (40)2 (P (56)2 over
(9)13 greater (25)4 altered (41)2 affected (57)2 positively
(10)12 improved (26)4 between (42)2 alleviated (58)2 prolong
(11)11 correlated (27)4 by (43)2 alter (59)2 reduce
(12)10 inhibited (28)4 downregulated (44)2 at (60)2 reduces
(13)6 attenuated (29)4 elevated (45)2 changed (61)2 reversed
(14)6 predicted (30)4 impact (46)2 declined
(15)6 to (31)4 improve (47)2 decreased,
(16)6 upregulated (32)4 improves (48)2 expanded

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--- WordNet output for significantly --- =>きわめて, 意味深く, 意味ありげに Overview of adv significantly The adv significantly has 3 senses (first 2 from tagged texts) 1. (6) significantly -- (in a statistically significant way; "the two groups differed significantly") 2. (3) significantly -- (in a significant manner; "our budget will be significantly affected by these new cuts") 3. importantly, significantly -- (in an important way or to an important degree; "more importantly, Weber held that the manifold meaning attached to the event by the social scientist could alter his definition of the concrete event itself") --- WordNet end ---