Proprioception is our silent sixth sense. Neuroscience is just beginning to understand it. – Vox.com

Sana, a petite 31-year-old French woman with curly brown hair, is strapped to a chair at the Clinical Center at the National Institutes of Health. In front of her, a desk. Surrounding her, 12 infrared cameras tracking her every move. The test is about to begin.

On the desk, a black cylinder stands upright. Its topped with a silvery plastic ball. Heres the challenge: Shes asked to touch her nose and then touch the ball in front of her. Easy. She touches her nose. She touches the ball.

Now comes the hard part.

A lab technician tells her to close her eyes. He places her finger on the ball, and then moves it back to her nose. He lets go and asks Sana to do it herself while keeping her eyes closed.

Suddenly, its like the location of the ball has been erased from her mind. She gropes around, swinging her arm widely to the left and the right. When she manages to touch the ball, it seems like an accident. She struggles to find her nose on her face, outright missing a few times.

Its like I am lost, she says, through an interpreter. When her eyes are closed, she doesnt know where her body is in space.

Try this task for yourself. Place a drinking glass in front of you. Touch the top of it a few times with your eyes open. Then try to find it with your eyes closed. Chances are you still can.

When we close our eyes, our sense of the world and our bodys place in it doesnt disappear. An invisible impression remains. This sense is called proprioception (pronounced pro-pree-o-ception); its an awareness of where our limbs are and how our bodies are positioned in space. And like the other senses vision, hearing, and so on it helps our brains navigate the world. Scientists sometimes refer to it as our sixth sense.

Proprioception is different from the others in a key way: It never turns off, except in very rare cases. We know what silence is when we cover our ears, we know what darkness is when we shut our eyes.

Sana is one of the few people in the entire world who knows what its like when the proprioceptive sense is turned off. Another is her older sister, Sawsen, 36, who was also undergoing the testing at the NIH, in August. She, too, has trouble finding her nose in the dark.

At home, Sawsen says, if the power goes out and shes standing up, I fall to the ground. The feeling is as hard to imagine as it is to describe. Its as if you had a blindfold and somebody turned you several times, and then youre asked to go in a direction. The first few seconds, you dont know what direction youre going in. Pure disorientation.

The sisters, whose last names Im not using for privacy reasons, also share another curiosity: They cant feel a lot of the things they touch. Even with my eyes open, when I touch the little ball, I dont feel it, Sawsen says.

Of all the senses, touch and proprioception are arguably the least understood. But in the past decade, neuroscientists have made huge breakthroughs that reveal how touch and proprioception work. That has led to hopeful insights that could yield better ways to treat pain and better prostheses for amputees. Its also given us a more complete understanding of what it means to be human and experience the world through a body.

Sana, Sawsen, and a handful of similar patients are ideal subjects for scientists who study touch and proprioception. Theres nothing unusual about their muscles or their brains. Theyre simply missing one tiny, but hugely consequential, thing: a molecule-sized receptor that acts as the doorway through which physical forces enter the nervous system and ascend into conscious awareness. The receptor is called piezo2, and it was discovered just 10 years ago.

The missing molecule essentially leaves them without the eyes of the proprioceptive system. It also leaves their skin unable to feel some specific sensations.

These patients are rare the NIH team and their colleagues around the world have identified only 18 cases, with the first two documented in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2016. They are the equivalent of identifying the first blind person, or the first deaf person, Alexander Chesler, a neuroscientist at the NIH who has been working with Sana, Sawsen, and the others, says. Here are people who, based on what we understood of the molecule at the time, would be touch-blind.

The effects of the condition can make it hard for people to control their bodies, particularly when their vision is occluded. And the symptoms of this rare genetic disorder are often misdiagnosed, or go undiagnosed for years.

By studying them, neuroscientists get to probe the essential functions of touch and the proprioceptive system, and also get to learn about the brains remarkable ability to adapt.

Carsten Bnnemann is a detective of neurological medical mysteries. When children have neurological conditions that are difficult to diagnose, he swoops in to try to crack the case. We look for the inexplicable, Bnnemann, a pediatric neurologist at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, says.

In 2015, one such mystery brought him to Calgary, Canada, to examine an 18-year-old woman with a strange disorder. She could walk she learned around age 7 but only when she looked at her feet. If she closed her eyes while standing, shed collapse to the floor. It was like her eyesight contained the power to turn on a secret switch and give her control over the body part she gazed upon. Out of sight, her body was beyond her control.

And when I examined her, I realized that she had no ... proprioception, Bnnemann says. When her eyes were closed, she had no sensation of her doctors gently moving her fingers up or down. But the absence of awareness wasnt just in her finger joints. She had no sense of movement in her elbows, her shoulders, her hips in any joint in her body.

Though it is often not in our conscious awareness, proprioception still serves a critical function. If you want to move in a coordinated fashion, you have to know where your body is at all moments, says Adam Hantman, a neuroscientist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute who studies proprioception. You could look at your limbs, but that means you cant look at other things. Proprioception allows our eyes to pay attention to whats going on outside our bodies.

To make the diagnosis, Bnnemanns team sequenced the girls entire genome and found a mutation on genes that code for a touch receptor called piezo2. In 2015, piezo2 was still new to science.

Before that, scientists had known for a long time that all kinds of special nerves are devoted to sensing the outside world. If nerves are the wires that transmit information from the world to our brains, these receptors are the switches the first cog in the biological machine where the electrical signals originate.

The landmark discovery of piezo2 happened at the Scripps Research Institute, where researchers had spent years prodding cells with tiny glass probes. (When poked, the piezo receptor produces a small electrical current. Piezo is Greek for to press.) The researchers found two receptors piezo1 and piezo2. When cells that contain these receptors are stretched, the receptors open up, letting in ions and setting off an electrical pulse.

Piezo1 is implicated in our bodys built-in blood-pressure monitoring systems, as well as other internal systems that rely on pressure sensing. Piezo2, further research revealed, is a molecule critical for both touch and proprioception, a gateway through which mechanical forces begin their journey into our consciousness.

In 2015, scientists were just starting to figure out what piezo2 did in mice, let alone humans. Bnnemann had to study up, and he returned to the NIH in Bethesda, Maryland, and emailed Chesler, who was studying mice whose genes had been modified to lack piezo2. Bnnemann emailed him about the patient, as well as another an 8-year-old girl in San Diego they had identified as having the mutation.

And that made me basically fall out of my chair and run up to his office, Chesler says. Id never had the opportunity to ask my mice just to describe what their life was like, what their experience was like, ask them questions.

Sana and Sawsen, like Bnnemanns first patient, were born with a genetic mutation that makes their piezo2 genes non-functioning. And thats left them with lifelong impairments with their proprioception, touch, and movement. Both women can walk a bit on their own, but use electric wheelchairs to get around. Both live independently. Sana is a clinical psychologist, and Sawsen heads up a camp for children with disabilities.

They dont know life with proprioception, which makes it hard for them to even describe what they lack. I have no good comparisons, because Ive always been this way, Sana says.

Of the few cases of people without proprioception in the medical history literature, the most famous was of Ian Waterman, a British man whose neurons sensing touch and proprioception were damaged by an infection. It left him without any feeling or proprioception from the neck down, though he could still move his body. It was a limbless limbo, the neurologist Jonathan Cole wrote in a medical biography of Waterman.

Waterman clearly had nerve damage. But until about a year ago, Sana and Sawsen never really knew what was wrong with them. Then, they tested positive for a mutation on their piezo2 genes, and that led them to Bonneman and Cheslers ongoing research on how piezo2 functions in the human body. So far, the researchers have seen a dozen patients who have non-functional piezo2 receptors.

Touch is a very complicated sense, since there are so many forms of it, each relying on slightly different systems of nerves and receptors.

Just appreciating all the things we can feel can invoke a sense of awe. If one of us snuck up behind you and moved a single hair, you would immediately know it, Chesler says. This is one of the most amazing biological machines.

In many ways, the sensory information we get from our bodies is much more varied than the information we get from our eyes, ears, and mouths.

For instance, heat and cold sensation work on different nerves than light touch sensations, and use different receptors (some of which were also only recently discovered). Pain, itch, and pressure are distinct too. There are also some touch sensations that are dependent on context. Think of how the feeling of a light touch of a T-shirt on your body fades from your awareness the longer you wear it. Or how, during a sunburn, wearing that T-shirt suddenly becomes unbearable.

Without piezo2, the sisters cant feel light, gentle touch, particularly on their hands and fingers. Sawsen tells me that when she puts her hand into a pocketbook, I will take my hand out of the bag thinking Im holding something, and my hand is empty, she says. She cant feel the objects, and she doesnt know where her hand is. So a pocketbook might as well be a black hole when shes not directly looking into it.

But the sisters can feel heat and cold. They can feel pressure. And theyre not immune to pain. Particularly, they can feel sharp sensations.

Sawsen has taken up sharpshooting as a hobby (to relieve stress) and has outfitted the trigger of the weapon with a hard-edged rectangular piece. When she digs her finger into the edge, she can feel it.

That type of pinching pain must begin its journey into the nervous system by a receptor other than piezo2. So when youre pinched, that feeling, we dont understand at the molecular level whats going on to activate your neurons, Chesler says. Thats surprising. How the acute pain of stepping on a LEGO brick exactly enters our nervous system is still a scientific mystery in the year 2019.

They can feel that type of pain, but they cant feel another called tactile allodynia. Thats when light touch sensations, which are normally pleasant, become painful. (In the lab, researchers create tactile allodynia by rubbing skin with capsaicin the spicy chemical in hot peppers.)

Another mystery: The patients can feel when their skin with hair is stroked, like on their arms. But strangely, they cant seem to feel individual hair movements. We dont know how they do it, Chesler says. Which is to say: Neuroscience doesnt understand, completely, how this sensation is generated in the body.

Its these insights that could lead to some practical outcomes of this research: Namely, new ways to treat pain. Scientists hope by identifying the receptors that bring physical sensations into our bodies, they can learn to augment them, perhaps turning them off when theyre causing pain.

That is the dream of pain research, Chesler says. Can we get away from these really coarse ways of looking at pain, and understand it at a more mechanistic level? If you dont know the receptor responsible for sharp pain, for instance, you cant design a drug to turn it off.

Touch is complicated. Proprioception might be even more so. But in studying it, researchers may yield discoveries and applications that stretch far beyond the human body.

Deep in all our muscles are fibers called muscle spindles: This is a bundle of fibers and nerves that record muscle stretch. On the nerves endings of the muscle spindles, yes, youll find piezo2. When the muscles are stretched, others contract, and piezo2 then transmits all that information to your spinal cord to determine where your limbs are.

Whats amazing is how every muscle in your body is sending out this information all the time. Your nervous system somehow processes that massive amount of data without any conscious work on our part. How could it possibly be conscious? Youd go wild from information overload.

Just think of what it takes to sit up straight. All the muscles in your back have to relay the right information so you can keep all the bones of your spine in line. The piezo2-less patients dont have that. They have scoliotic posture because they dont have the muscles in their back telling their brains how to align their spine. (Many of these patients, Im told, are also malpositioned in the womb before birth, or are born with hip displacement thats how fundamental of a sense proprioception is.)

Lacking the primary input for proprioception, Sana and Sawsen have to concentrate hard to not feel disoriented. Sometimes, Sana says, just her hair getting in the way of her eyes will cause her to lose orientation of where her body is. The same can happen if someone gets too close to her face, blocking her peripheral vision. Which means she needs to concentrate extra hard if she wants to kiss someone.

Its still a deep mystery how the brain pulls together all the sources of proprioceptive information so effortlessly.

The most amazing this about it is how utterly flexible it is, says Adam Hantman, a neuroscientist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute who studies proprioception. You can ask me to reach out for a cup, and say, Dont do it in any way youve ever done it before, and without practicing, I could snap my hand around upside down, put it behind my back and reach that cup. Ive never done that action before in my life, and I could do it without practice.

And there are so many beautiful complications in this research still not well understood by scientists.

Scientists generally regard touch and proprioception as different systems. But they can overlap to a certain extent, says Joriene De Nooij, a neurology researcher who studies proprioception at Columbia University. Receptors in the skin contribute to our understanding of where our limbs are. When youre walking theres all these pressure receptors in your feet that will be activated every time you take a step, she says. And that also gives our brains information about where the body is.

We have so, so many inputs into our sensory system that give us feedback and orient our minds to what our bodies are doing. Learning how the brain actually pulls this off what are the algorithms it uses to build these models and utilize them will help us make better machines, Hantman says.

Particularly, it may help researchers make better prosthetics that are directly controlled by an amputees nervous system. The machines are pretty good at taking a signal from the brain and making the prosthetics move, he says. But we really havent done that great a job closing the loop, getting sensory information back.

The brain also does another thing involving proprioception that researchers deeply want to understand: How it compensates in the face of loss, like in the cases of Sana and Sawsen.

The muscle spindles and other nerve endings explain how proprioception works in the body. But even stranger is how it manifests in our minds.

I keep thinking about what happens when I close my eyes and reach for something. Theres a glass out in front of me on my desk. I can still grab it with my eyes closed. Im trying to concentrate on the thought of where the glass is in space, and dissect it: What exactly am I experiencing in this moment?

Its like trying to describe a daydream. You know its there. It seems real. But it has no form. Its consciousness, says Ardem Patapoutian, a neuroscience researcher at Scripps, whose lab first discovered the piezo receptors. A physical aspect of consciousness, he says, is informed and shaped, in part, by proprioception.

In reporting this story, Ive come to think of the process by which the brain creates consciousness as a kind of wizard or conjurer stirring a potion. The wizard takes sensory inputs from our bodies: like touch, temperature, joint awareness, mixes it in with our thoughts, our emotions, and our memories, our predictions about the world, and throws it in the cauldron to generate our consciousness. A whole sense of self emerges from these disparate parts. Its greater than the sum of the parts, and singular.

But its not like if youre missing an ingredient, the potion goes bad. Sana and Sawsen are missing information from their piezo2 receptors, but their minds still use other ingredients to compensate. Theyre as conscious as anyone else.

Chesler believes the sisters brains still generate a map of their body. They just have to use other inputs, like their vision, or other sensations, like heat and cold, or painful touch.

Like a blind person with an attuned ear, they use their other senses to compensate for what they lack. When Sana was reaching out for the cylinder with her eyes closed, she says she was trying to feel a draft from a nearby air conditioning duct. She remembered it felt colder by the ball and was trying to find that cold spot.

Whats going on in their brains to construct their body image in the absence of information that we rely on so steadily? This question is one of the most important ones we could be asking about this sense, Chesler says, and one that Im hoping, in the next few years, my lab will actually start addressing.

But you dont need a study to see this is true: The human mind has remarkable resilience.

You get used to your own body, Sawsen says. You learn to cope with the materials you have access to.

Brian Resnick is a senior science reporter at Vox, covering psychology, space, medicine, the environment, and anything that makes you think, Whoa, thats cool.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misspelled the name Sawsen.

Link:
Proprioception is our silent sixth sense. Neuroscience is just beginning to understand it. - Vox.com

100 hospitals and health systems with great neurosurgery and spine programs | 2019 – Becker’s Hospital Review

Becker's Healthcare named the following organizations to the 2019 edition of its list "100 hospitals and health systems with great neurosurgery and spine programs."

The organizations featured on this year's list have extensive neurosurgery and spine programs, providing treatment and cutting edge research into brain and spine disorders. Many hospitals and health systems featured have earned top honors for medical excellence, outcomes and patient experience in their spine and brain surgery departments.

To develop this list, the Becker's Healthcare editorial team examined national rankings and awards for neurosurgery and spine care. The editorial team examined U.S. News & World Report national rankings for neurology and neurosurgery; CareChex national and regional rankings for neurological care and Blue Distinction Center for Spine Surgery designation to develop this list. Please contact Laura Dyrda at ldyrda@beckershealthcare.com with any questions about this list.

Note: Hospitals cannot pay for inclusion on this list. Organizations are presented in alphabetical order.

Abbott Northwestern Hospital (Minneapolis). At Abbott Northwestern Hospital's Spine Institute, physicians treat more than 4,000 patients annually. The hospital has been designated as a Blue Distinction Center for Spine Surgery by BlueCross BlueShield of Minnesota. With five area partners, Abbott Northwestern Hospital was ranked on U.S. News & World Report's list of 50 best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

AdventHealth Orlando (Fla.). AdventHealth's Neuroscience Institute provides comprehensive care to patients with brain and spinal disorders. The health system's brain tumor team includes 12 physicians, and the spine team features 15 physicians that aim to stay at the forefront of spinal treatment. With an elite team, U.S. News & World Report ranked AdventHealth Orlando among the 50 best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery for 2019-20.

Ascension Seton (Austin, Texas). Physicians at Ascension Seton's Brain & Spine Institute specialize in minimally invasive and complex surgery for patients suffering from problems with their brain, spine, cerebrovascular system and peripheral nerves. Spine, orthopedic and neurosurgeons at the hospital have been recognized nationally and internationally for pioneering new treatments and research. The Seton Brain & Spine Institute has five locations offering neurosurgery across Texas.

Atrium Health (Charlotte, N.C.). Atrium Health offers one of the region's largest neurosurgery specialty programs. The health system's spine institute has been recognized by Blue Cross Blue Shield as a Blue Distinction Center for its quality care and outcomes. An early adopter of minimally invasive and robotic surgery, Atrium Health's Neurosciences Institute has 20-plus years of groundbreaking investigator-initiated and industry-sponsored clinical trials.

Barnes-Jewish Hospital/Washington University School of Medicine (St. Louis). The Barnes-Jewish & Washington University Spine Center receives patient referrals from all around the world. As a result, it has grown into one of the largest clinical spine practices in the nation. U.S. News & World Report ranked Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery, and the top hospital in Missouri for those specialties in 2019-20.

Barrow Neurological Institute (Phoenix). Physicians at Barrow Neurological Institute oversee more than 8,000 admissions and perform more than 5,000 neurosurgeries annually more than anywhere else in the U.S. There are 26 neurosurgeons, nine neurosurgery fellows and 28 neurosurgery residents on staff at the hospital. As one of the leading spine organizations in the world, U.S. News & World Report named Barrow Neurological Institute among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville (Fla.). Surgeons at Baptist Medical Center have teamed up with Baptist MD Anderson Cancer Center in Jacksonville to conduct clinical trials related to brain and spine tumors. Along with its extensive brain and spine tumors division, Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville has a robust stroke and cerebrovascular care team and four neurologic oncologists. Neurosurgeons at the hospital's Stroke & Cerebrovascular Center are participating in more than 20 ongoing clinical trials.

Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center (Houston). Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center created its Neurosciences Institute in 2013, and it has since has been accredited by DNV GL Healthcare as a certified comprehensive stroke center. Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center neurosurgeons have also helped the hospital receive the Gold Plus Quality Achievement Award from the American Stroke Association. Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center was recognized in 2019-20 by U.S. News & World Report as one of the best hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery.

Beaumont Health (Southfield, Mich.). Beaumont Health was the first hospital in Michigan to create a pediatric stereo-EEG epilepsy surgery program to pinpoint seizures and cure drug-resistant epilepsy. The hospital's neurosurgery team is researching stem cell regeneration and spine reconstruction. Additionally, as a leading hospital for orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery and neurology, Beaumont Health has a leading spine team with on-call surgeons who can be at the hospital in 15 minutes no matter the time of day.

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (Boston). All physicians at Beth Israel's Spine Center are board-certified and faculty of Boston-based Harvard Medical School. In total, there are four neurosurgeons and three orthopedic spine surgeons. To make care more accessible, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center has opened six spine centers throughout Massachusetts that provide comprehensive care patients in Boston and the surrounding area.

Boston Children's Hospital. The spine division of Boston Children's Hospital collaborates with the hospital's department of neurosurgery to treat complex spine conditions. Boston Children's Hospital has a complex cervical spine program as well as a spine and sports program. As a leading hospital for orthopedics and spine in the U.S., Boston Children's has various study groups, including a spinal deformity group whose Scoliosis Outcomes Database is cited in more than 45 abstracts and 15 peer-reviewed publications annually. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report ranked Boston Children's No. 1 in the nation for pediatric neurology and neurosurgery.

Brigham and Women's Hospital (Boston). The Comprehensive Spine Center at Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital brings together neurosurgeons, orthopedic surgeons, and specialists in pain management, physical medicine and rehabilitation. Brigham and Women's Hospital has five other spine centers throughout Massachusetts. U.S. News & World Report ranked the hospital among the top 20 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Carilion Clinic (Roanoke, Va.). The 1,026-bed Carilion Clinic hospital system provided care to nearly 1 million residents of Virginia and West Virginia in 2018. Touting around 13,320 employees and nine hospitals, the health system has 732 physicians across 77 specialties. Surgeons at Carilion's Institute for Orthopaedics and Neurosciences perform approximately 300 minimally invasive spine procedures annually, and it has the region's only deformity correction program for both adult and pediatric patients.

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Los Angeles). Serving more than 1 million patients annually at more than 40 locations, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center has more than 4,500 physicians on staff. The Cedars-Sinai spine team has 26 spine surgeons, assisted by eight advanced care providers. The health system is active in research efforts, hosting an array of clinical trials. Cedars-Sinai splits its spine care between four locations, including the Cedars-Sinai Spine Center and the Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Institute. U.S. News & World Report ranked Cedars-Sinai as the No. 12 hospital for neurology and neurosurgery for 2019-20.

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. Established in 1883, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center has more than 600 beds and around 1.3 million patient encounters in fiscal year 2017. The hospital's Crawford Spine Center was recognized by U.S. News & World Report as among the best hospitals for pediatric neurology and neurosurgery for 2019-20. The hospital is also involved in spine research, focusing on endoscopic technology, scoliosis correction and guided spine growth.

Cleveland Clinic. Featuring both a robust clinical program and a comprehensive spine research lab, Cleveland Clinic's Center for Spine Health sees thousands of patients annually. The Center for Spine Health has three specialty departments to address lower back pain, spinal deformity and spine tumors. Cleveland Clinic has 14 spine surgeons on staff, 14 medical/interventional staff members and 13 advanced care providers in its Center for Spine Health. The center is also testing robotics and is in the midst of a cervical spondylotic myelopathy surgical trial. U.S. News & World Report ranked Cleveland Clinic No. 10 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (Lebanon, N.H.). Dartmouth-Hitchcock developed its Center for Pain and Spine to meet the needs of its patient population, which comprises about 1.9 million people across northern New England. Anthem BlueCross BlueShield named the center a Blue Distinction Center for Spine Surgery for its commitment to good patient outcomes. U.S. News & World Report recognized the hospital as the highest performing neurosurgery institute in New Hampshire in 2019-20.

Duke University Hospital (Durham, N.C.). Duke University Hospital's comprehensive spine institute has 106 physicians on hand to provide an array of spine-related treatments. The spine team at Duke performs more than 1,200 spine surgeries annually. The hospital equipped all its surgery centers with intraoperative imaging equipment to ensure all procedures and physicians have access to real-time imaging information. U.S. News & World Report named Duke its No. 1 hospital in North Carolina and among the top 25 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Emory University Hospital (Atlanta). With its six locations throughout Atlanta, Emory University Orthopaedics & Spine Hospital offers patients comprehensive treatment options. Emory's neuroscience program will soon be headlined by the Emory Musculoskeletal Institute in Brookhaven, Ga. The institute broke ground in October 2019 and will be a 180,000-square-foot center dedicated to spine care. Emory University Hospital planners incorporated several environmentally conscious features into the institute. U.S. News & World Report ranked Emory among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin (Milwaukee). Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin is the region's only academic regional medical center. Froedtert physicians see patients across the greater Milwaukee suburbs. Froedtert has four locations that specialize in spine care, including the outpatient clinic SpineCare. In 2017, Froedtert physicians treated 8,606 patients through its neurosurgery program.

Geisinger (Danville, Pa.). Founded more than a century ago, Geisinger has provided care to central Pennsylvania residents for generations. At the forefront of its neuroscience program is the Geisinger Neuroscience Institute. Employing a combination of treatment methods including microsurgery, minimally invasive surgery, robotic surgery and image-guided surgery, Geisinger has 24 providers on its neurosurgery staff. The health system is also on the forefront of innovation in healthcare delivery, with its ProvenCare program offering refunds to spine patients dissatisfied with their care. Geisinger is also a Walmart spine center of excellence, meaning the retail giant sends patients from across the country to undergo spinal evaluation and surgery at the health system.

Hackensack (N.J.) University Medical Center. Hackensack University Medical Center offers a robust program for neurosurgery care, including the Orthopedic Institute, which has more than 50 physicians on staff. Healthgrades has recognized Hackensack University Medical Center with its Cranial Neurosurgery Excellence Award for the last four years, and U.S. News & World Report ranked Hackensack as high performing for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Henry Ford Hospital (Detroit). With more than 35 physicians specializing in spine and related specialties on staff, Henry Ford draws patients in Detroit and its greater suburban locations to its Henry Ford Spine Centers. In 2017 alone, Henry Ford surgeons performed some 75,000 surgeries across its 200 care sites. U.S. News & World Report ranked Henry Ford among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Hoag Health Network (Newport Beach, Calif.). Hoag Health Network offers numerous spine programs, including care at Hoag Orthopedic Institute. In 2018, the institute reported 3,246 hospital spine procedures, as well as 180 ambulatory procedures. Hoag has two acute care hospitals, 11 urgent care centers and eight health centers it staffs with a team of more than 1,700 physicians and 6,000 employees. U.S. News & World Report ranked Hoag Hospital among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Hospital for Special Surgery (New York City). Holding the No. 1 U.S. News & World Report ranking in orthopedics for 10 consecutive years, HSS surgeons perform more than 32,000 procedures annually. In 2016, the hospital reported 469 non-cervical spine fusion cases, which was well above the 48-procedure average for New York state. The hospital also focuses on research, with a 300-plus member research department that has a $45 million grant portfolio and $25 million in industry funding. Current spine-focused projects include studying spine instability, developmental deformity and tissue degeneration.

Houston Methodist Hospital. For nearly 30 years, Houston Methodist Hospital has been on the forefront of spine and neurosurgical care. The hospital is home to the center for neurodegeneration, which is comprised of 11 labs staffed with researchers working on therapies for chronic paralysis and neurologic loss. The hospital has 14 neurosurgeons on staff and was among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report for 2019-20.

Huntington Hospital (Pasadena, Calif.). Spine surgeons at Huntington Hospital specialize in treating spinal degenerative diseases such as deformities, lumbar stenosis and traumatic disorders. The hospital is home to a 32-bed orthopedic and neurological nursing unit, a 24-bed rehabilitation unit, an outpatient neurophysiology lab as well as angiography suites. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report ranked Huntington Hospital among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery.

Inova Fairfax Hospital (Falls Church, Va.). Inova Fairfax hospital is home to the largest neurological practice in the Washington, D.C., area. Nine Inova neurosurgeons perform more than 3,000 cases a year. The Inova team was the first in Northern Virginia to conduct MRI-guided surgeries to treat Parkinson's disease and a brain tumor. The Inova Neuroscience and Spine Institute has 12 specialized treatment programs and was awarded The Joint Commission's Gold Seal of Approval for its cervical and lumbar spine surgery program.

IU Health (Indianapolis). IU Health's Neuroscience Center offers patients treatment across a variety of neurological specialties, including oncology, spine surgery, stereotactic and functional neurosurgery, trauma treatment and pediatric neurosurgery. IU Health's team of neurosurgeons are at the forefront of using new technology for improving outcomes. Researchers at IU Health are currently pioneering four clinical trials on epilepsy and hematoma evacuation.

Jefferson Health (Philadelphia). Jefferson Hospital for Neuroscience is the only hospital in the Philadelphia region dedicated to neuroscience, and is one of the busiest academic neurosurgical programs in the U.S. The neuroscience program has five surgeons on staff, and in 2015, was the first in the region to offer deep brain stimulation. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report ranked Jefferson Health-Thomas Jefferson University Hospital among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery. The health system also has a robust spine program, with its spine surgeons completing around 7,000 procedures each year at inpatient and ambulatory locations. It was also the first in the country to enroll a patient in the INSPIRE 2.0 clinical trial examining treatment for spinal cord injury.

Johns Hopkins Medicine (Baltimore). Physicians in the department of neurology and neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Medicine have been treating patients since 1889, and now perform more than 4,000 operations and 30,000 outpatient consultations each year. The Johns Hopkins Carnegie Center for Surgical Innovation, a collaboration between the departments of neurosurgery and biomedical engineering, is working on new technology to make spine surgery safer through image-guided interventions. Johns Hopkins neurosurgeons are actively researching and conducting clinical trials on Parkinson's disease, dementia and brain cancer. The Johns Hopkins Hospital was ranked No. 1 in the in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20 by U.S. News & World Report.

Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center. Kaiser Permanente's neurologists and neurosurgeons perform hundreds of complex procedures each year in one of the nation's busiest neurosurgical centers. The health system's 70-year history gives it a leg up in educating the next generation of specialists through neurology and neurosurgery residency programs, as well as a neuroanesthesia fellowship program. Kaiser's Los Angeles Medical Center houses the health system's comprehensive spine surgery department as well as a radiosurgery program dating back to 1989.

Keck Medicine of USC (Los Angeles). The USC Spine Center aims to deliver a coordinated, conservative approach to spine care at four locations in the greater Los Angeles area. Specialists at USC Spine Center are all fellowship-trained faculty members at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and have collectively gained an overall patient satisfaction rating of over 4.5 out of 5 stars. USC Spine Center, which is part of USC Orthopaedic Surgery and USC Neurological Surgery, is recognized as a Blue Distinction Center for spine surgery by Blue Shield of California. Additionally, Keck Medicine of USC was ranked No. 16 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report.

Lehigh Valley Health Network (Allentown, Pa.). Lehigh Valley Health Network's spine and neurology services are provided through its Institute for Surgical Excellence, where surgeons perform over 35,000 surgeries annually 70 percent more than other centers in the area. The system boasts the region's only spine neuronavigation system, as well as a 14-bed neuroscience intensive care unit. With surgeons currently involved in at least five clinical trials focused on neurology, Lehigh Valley Health Network offers patients unique opportunities to undergo new treatments in addition to surgery.

Lifespan (Providence, R.I.). With six experts on its surgical team, Lifespan's Comprehensive Spine Center is affiliated with the Providence-based Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, giving patients access to advanced technology and treatments. Operating at both Rhode Island Hospital in Providence and the newly opened Newport (R.I.) Hospital, the Comprehensive Spine Center is housed within the Norman Prince Neurosciences Institute. Lifespan's 13 neurosurgeons perform about 2,000 procedures annually, and they're researching the use of microelectrode arrays in epilepsy, light treatments for neurological disease, and deep brain stimulation for Alzheimer's patients.

Loyola University Medical Center (Maywood, Ill.). As an academic medical center with researchers involved in nearly 200 clinical trials, Loyola University Medical Center leverages unique neurosurgical techniques such as deep brain stimulation and stereotactic radiotherapy. Each year, Loyola's highly experienced surgeons perform over 1,000 cranial surgeries and collaborate on about 150 cranial-base operations at the Center for Cranial Base Surgery, which features a fully equipped speech and swallowing laboratory. With a 13-bed neuro intensive care unit, Loyola was ranked No. 28 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report for 2019-20.

Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston). Massachusetts General Hospital's neurosurgery department performs more than 4,000 procedures every year and was the first to use deep brain stimulation to reduce epileptic seizures. MGH's team of 20 faculty neurosurgeons and 20 residents in training oversees 86 dedicated beds and a 22-bed ICU. Home to the nation's largest hospital-based neuroscience research program, MGH is committed to studying rare disorders of the nervous system, neurodegenerative disorders and effective ALS therapies. U.S. News & World Report ranked Mass General among the top 20 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Mayo Clinic (Rochester, Minn.). Mayo Clinic is one of the premier institutions for neurosurgery in the nation, with its Rochester location ranked No. 2 for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report in 2019-20. Neurosurgeons annually perform 7,000 procedures at its three campuses in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota. The health system is also on the forefront of neurosurgical research and currently has 31 clinical trials open for participation as well as a registry for primary spinal tumor research.

Medical University of South Carolina (Charleston). The Medical University of South Carolina's spine center team is a designated Blue Distinction Center for spine surgery, a mark of demonstrated quality outcomes. The hospital has $9 million in technology development funding through an in-house innovation program called Zucker Institute for Applied Neurosciences, a technology accelerator embedded within the health system to move new neuroscience innovations into the clinical settings quickly. The Medical University of South Carolina's spine program was one of the first in the state to offer patients endoscopic spine surgery, and it plans to expand its endoscopic and minimally invasive spine outpatient offerings.

MedStar Georgetown University Hospital (Washington, D.C.). The 609-bed MedStar Georgetown University Hospital has a multidisciplinary spine center and offers comprehensive neurosurgery services, including a pediatric neurosurgery program. It includes 12 neurosurgeons and spine specialists, of which five are trained in minimally invasive spine care. Its minimally invasive spine specialists have performed thousands of procedures, from discectomies to decompressions. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report named MedStar Georgetown University Hospital high performing in neurology and neurosurgery, as well as one of the best regional hospitals in the nation.

Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center (Houston). Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center includes the Memorial Hermann Orthopedic & Spine Hospital to offer patients the latest in spine care. The Memorial Hermann Orthopedic & Spine Hospital features 64 private patient rooms, eight two-room suites and 10 surgical suites. Patients coming to the medical center can also receive care at the Mischer Spine Center, where neurosurgeons perform more than 3,000 spine surgeries annually. The Mischer Spine Center is affiliated with Memorial Hermann Mischer Neuroscience Institute at the Texas Medical Center, which offers opportunities for patients to receive the benefits of cutting-edge research. There are 25 spine and nerve research clinical trials in progress or recently completed at the Mischer Neuroscience Institute.

MemorialCare (Fountain Valley, Calif.). Spine care at MemorialCare is offered by a multidisciplinary team of neurosurgeons, orthopedic surgeons and nonoperative specialists. Patients seeking care have the option of going to one of three California-based locations, in Long Beach, Laguna Hills or Fountain Valley. Two MemorialCare hospitals are ranked high performing in adult neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report. The Spine Center at MemorialCare Long Beach Medical Center recently acquired robotic navigation technology to enhance precision in spine surgery.

Michigan Medicine (Ann Arbor). Michigan Medicine's neurosurgery department celebrated 100 years of offering adult and pediatric neurosurgical care last year. It includes 24 clinical faculty and eight research faculty members. Michigan Medicine's neurosurgery department also has a mission to educate and train the next generation of neurosurgical and spine care specialists via its residencies and fellowships. Its neurosurgeons are involved in an outreach program, Project Shunt, that offers neurosurgical care to children in Guatemala. U.S. News & World Report ranked Michigan Medicine No. 19 on its list of the 50 best hospitals for adult neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Milton S. Hershey Medical Center (Hershey, Pa.). Milton S. Hershey Medical Center offers spine and neurosurgery services via its spine center, which includes a 25-person care team. The spine center has developed a "back coach" program, which offers information and resources to those suffering from chronic back and neck pain. The hospital also has a robust neurosurgery research faculty that includes 17 members focusing on several key research areas, including using 3D models to understand tumor growth.

Montefiore Health System (New York City). Montefiore Health System aims to be at the forefront of neurosurgical research and care with eight comprehensive care centers and 12 neurosurgeons on staff. Earlier this year, Montefiore held its first pediatric neurointerventional symposium, which included experts from the U.S. and Canada. Montefiore Medical Center, the health system's flagship, was ranked among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for adult neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report for 2019-20.

Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital (Greensboro, N.C.). The 517-bed Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital has received several recognitions for its spine care services, including being ranked No. 1 in the state for medical excellence in spinal surgery and spinal fusion by CareChex in 2018. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina also designated the facility a Blue Distinction Center + for spine surgery last year. The hospital offers major interventional neuroradiology and neurosurgery treatments with a multidisciplinary team of neurologists, neuroradiologists other nonoperative specialists to ensure comprehensive care. Cone Health includes 19 orthopedic spine surgeons and neurosurgeons.

Mount Sinai Hospital (New York City). The Spine Hospital at Mount Sinai offers the full spectrum of cervical, thoracic and lumbar spine care. It includes 16 orthopedic and neurospine surgeons who provide care along with a team of nonoperative spine specialists. The hospital is also a preferred spine care site for retired NFL players. The health system has a strong foundation in research through various programs, including the Friedman Brain Institute, an interdisciplinary clinical and research hub focused on brain and spinal cord disorders. U.S. News & World Report ranked Mount Sinai Hospital among the top 20 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center (New York City). NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center's Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center includes 24 neurosurgeons, neuroradiologists, neuropsychologists and neuroendocrinologists, who offer clinical services, conduct research and train students, residents and fellows. Patients receiving care at the center have access to the latest research-based medicine, including access to 16 neurosurgery-focused clinical trials. NewYork-Presbyterian was ranked No. 4 on U.S. News & World Report's 2019-20 list of the 50 best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery.

Northwell Health (New Hyde Park, N.Y.). Northwell Health's Institute for Neurology and Neurosurgery includes a multidisciplinary team that offers a wide array of clinical services, and in collaboration with the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, the physicians and scientists conduct research and clinical trials that advance the field. U.S. News & World Report ranked Northwell's North Shore University Hospital among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery, while also distinguishing Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City as high performing in the specialty for 2019-20.

Northwestern Memorial Hospital (Chicago). Northwestern Memorial Hospital includes 38 neurological surgery and spine surgery specialists. It also offers a combined orthopedic spine and neurosurgical spine fellowship to train the next generation of spine and neurosurgeons. Earlier this year, the hospital launched the Northwestern Medicine Hispanic Brain and Spine Tumor Program in Chicago, which aims to reduce barriers to specialized care for the Hispanic and Latino population. U.S. News & World Report ranked Northwestern Memorial Hospital No. 5 on its list of the 50 best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Norton Healthcare (Louisville, Ky.). Norton Healthcare is home to the Norton Leatherman Spine Center, serving patients in Louisville and southern Indiana. Specialists at Norton Leatherman Spine perform more than 4,000 surgeries annually, and patients see its providers there more than 30,000 times a year. The fellowship-trained specialists at Norton Leatherman Spine have an average of 20 years of experience and focus on research as well as training the next generation of spine surgeons. The hospital has trained more than 100 spine surgeons who are practicing across the country.

NYU Langone Health (New York City). NYU Langone Health's neurosurgery department consists of more than 20 full-time clinical and research faculty members who take on other physicians' most complex surgical cases. Combined with the system's orthopedic spine surgeons, NYU Langone supports about 2,700 spine procedures per year. Its spine center is equipped with robotic technology and a 3D platform for planning and performing surgeries and provides operative and nonoperative treatment for about 18,000 adults and children annually. NYU Langone Hospitals is ranked No. 9 among U.S. News & World Report's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery.

Ochsner Medical Center (New Orleans). Ochsner Health System's neurosurgery program stands out for various reasons, including being the only such program in Louisiana and one of only five U.S. centers to offer in-utero surgery to repair spinal bifida in babies during pregnancy. Each year, neurosurgeons across Ochsner Health System perform more than 1,500 adult and pediatric surgeries. The health system's spine and back care program is also highly rated, earning five stars from Healthgrades. Ochsner Medical Center, part of Ochsner Health System, is among the nation's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2019-20 rankings.

Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (Columbus). Ohio State University is the home of an 87-bed, 60,000-square-foot brain and spine hospital that includes specialized units for stroke care, neurotrauma and traumatic brain injuries and spinal cord injury. The university also houses one of the nation's only centers that pursue innovative projects and research through the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems program, which is sponsored by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research. Additionally, the university has the only rehabilitation program in central Ohio certified to handle traumatic brain injury. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report recognized Wexner Medical Center as high performing in adult neurology and neurosurgery.

Oregon Health & Science University Hospital (Portland). Oregon Health & Science University Hospital has pioneered innovation in neurological surgery, including North America's first deep brain stimulation surgery, the world's first neuronal stem cell transplants and an intraoperative MRI facility. It also has a leading neurosurgery training program and advanced fellowships in skull base and vascular, functional and pediatric neurosurgery. The hospital is ranked No. 44 among U.S. News & World Report's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Penn Medicine (Philadelphia). Penn Medicine neurosurgeons perform more than 5,000 operations annually at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Hospital, Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, Penn Medicine Virtua Neurosciences and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Penn Medicine's neurosurgery department also includes a research program led by basic scientists in brain, spine and nervous system diseases and disorders. Penn Medicine researchers are working on a prognostic blood test that would detect and measure neuronal proteins in the cerebrospinal fluid. In 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report ranked the health system's Pennsylvania Hospital No. 31 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery.

ProMedica (Toledo, Ohio). ProMedica is a health system with more than 794 hospital beds serving 27 counties in Ohio and southeast Michigan. The system includes the ProMedica Wildwood Orthopaedic and Spine Hospital, which is designated a Blue Distinction Center for spine care by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and earned the 2018 Press Ganey Guardian of Excellence Award for physician engagement. The system's ProMedica Toledo Hospital also offers advanced navigation and robotics for complex brain and spine surgeries; it became the first in Ohio to offer the 3D mapping technology in 2017.

Rush University Medical Center (Chicago). Rush University Medical Center is one of the top 10 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery, according to U.S. News & World Report. Its neurosurgery program consistently reports the most neurosurgical discharges in the Chicago area. In 2018, the health system reported 4,334 neurological surgery outpatient visits focused on the brain and 6,498 outpatient neurological visits focused on the spine. The health system also has a robust spine and back care program, with 12 physicians and surgeons increasingly moving toward minimally invasive and outpatient procedures. The health systems surgeons aim to stay at the forefront of patient treatment and participate in clinical trials investigating degenerative disc disease treatment, registry data for metastatic spine tumors and spinal stenosis treatment with new technology.

Saint Barnabas Medical Center (Livingston, N.J.). Saint Barnabas Medical Center houses the 22-physician neurological team of RWJBarnabas Health, the largest healthcare system in New Jersey. The Saint Barnabas Institute of Neurology & Neurosurgery is a level 4 epilepsy center with nine physicians focused on excellence in clinical care as well as clinical research. The hospital also has an innovative spine surgery department that has used a microdiscectomy technique developed by a member of its team to treat more than 500 patients. Saint Barnabas is recognized as high performing in neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report.

Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City (Mo.). Saint Luke's Marion Bloch Neuroscience Institute has an advanced comprehensive stroke center accredited by the Joint Commission that leads the region in endovascular interventions and outcomes. It provides advanced stroke care to more than 2,000 patients annually, and the integrated spine program earned designation as a Blue Distinction Center+ for Spine Surgery by Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. Saint Luke's Spine Surgery Program has earned the Joint Commission's Gold Seal of Approval of Spine Surgery Certification. The system also has a level 4 comprehensive epilepsy center and a seven-member neurosurgeon team. For 2019-20, Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City was named among U.S. News & World Report's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery.

Scripps Health (San Diego). Scripps Health offers neurosurgery and follow-up care at five San Diego County locations. At Scripps Health locations, physicians offer advanced techniques and technology, including minimally invasive brain surgery treatments and a robotics platform. Programs of Scripps Green Hospital and Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla ranked among U.S. News & World Report's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20.

Spectrum Health (Grand Rapids, Mich.). Spectrum Health's neurosurgery department specializes in disorders affecting the central nervous system and offers services at five centers across Michigan, including a level 4 epilepsy center. Spectrum Health is also home to Helen DeVos Children's Hospital, which has the only pediatric neurosurgery program in the region. As the largest hospital group in West Michigan, Spectrum Health has been ranked among America's 50 best hospitals by Healthgrades for four consecutive years and has 1,600 physicians focused on more than 110 specialties.

St. Luke's Boise (Idaho) Medical Center. St. Luke's Boise Medical Center is part of the nonprofit St. Luke's Health System, Idaho's largest, comprising 14 hospitals. St. Luke's Boise, which includes four neurosurgery centers and three spine clinics in Idaho, has been ranked as a top 100 hospital by IBM Watson Health. After doubling the number of referrals to its spine care clinic in 2018, the hospital plans to open another location in 2020.

Stanford (Calif.) Health Care. The Stanford department of neurosurgery is composed of 61 neurosurgeons who perform 4,000 neurosurgical operations annually. It was named the No. 9 hospital in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report in 2019-20 and its stroke center was the first in the nation to be certified as a comprehensive stroke center by the Joint Commission. The department has 30 active labs researching topics including brain injury, deep brain stimulation, brain tumors and epilepsy.

Stony Brook (N.Y.) University Hospital. Stony Brook University Hospital's Neurosurgery Spine Center is a tertiary care academic medical center that has been named one of America's 100 Best Hospitals for stroke care by Healthgrades for five consecutive years. Stony Brook has more than 70 labs researching topics including spine and brain trauma, stroke and multiple sclerosis. The Neurosurgery Spine Center is the only practice in Suffolk County with two full-time pediatric neurosurgeons, and the adult neurology center sees more than 18,000 patients per year.

Sutter Health (Sacramento, Calif.). Eleven hospitals within the Sutter Health network a 24-hospital, nonprofit health system with more than 12,000 physicians received recognition from the American Stroke Association for providing a high level of stroke care in 2019. Eden Medical Center in Castro Valley, Calif., was named one of America's 100 Best Hospitals for stroke care by Heathgrades in 2019. Sutter Medical Center in Sacramento, Calif., also earned recognition as high-performing in neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report in 2019.

Swedish Medical Center (Englewood, Colo.). Swedish Medical Center serves as the Rocky Mountain region's neurotrauma provider and has spine experts who perform an average of 90 spine surgeries per month. Part of HCA's HealthONE, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association designated it a Blue Distinction Center for spine surgery, and UnitedHealth Group designated it a Center of Excellence for spine surgery. It serves as the region's referral center for the most advanced stroke treatment and was the state's first Joint Commission-certified comprehensive stroke center.

Texas Children's Hospital (Houston). Texas Children's Hospital was the first hospital in the world to use real-time MRI-guided thermal imaging and laser technology to treat epilepsy. Named the No. 3 best neurosurgery center on U.S. News & World Report's 2019-20 list, the hospital performs more than 950 neurosurgical operations every year. It was also the first hospital to use a device similar to a pacemaker in the brain, which recognizes oncoming seizures and prevents them.

The Christ Hospital (Cincinnati). The Christ Hospital Joint & Spine Center is a seven-story facility with 14 operating rooms, four of which are dedicated solely to spine surgery. The Joint & Spine Center also offers physical, occupational and speech therapy services and physicians dedicated solely to joint, spine and brain care. Founded more than 125 years ago, The Christ Hospital has performed more spine procedures than any other hospital in the Cincinnati area.

Tulsa (Okla.) Spine & Specialty Hospital. Founded in 2002, Tulsa Spine & Specialty Hospital has a national reputation top-level patient care. It was named one of America's 100 best hospitals for spine surgery by Healthgrades. The physician-owned hospital was also honored with the Cigna Center of Excellence designation in 2018 for orthopedic back surgery and earned five stars from Healthgrades for spinal fusion in 2018. The hospital has 13 dedicated spine surgeons who perform minimally invasive procedures.

University of California San Diego Health. UC San Diego's neurosurgery division was founded in 1971 and features four intraoperative MRI and CT suites, destination skull base tumor programs and neurocritical care units. The division collaborates regularly with the UC San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego-based Scripps Research Institute and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif., and received $30 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health in 2018. It was ranked among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery in 2019-20 according to U.S. News & World Report.

UCI Health (Irvine, Calif.). UCI Health is the only academic health system in Orange County, Calif., and UCI Medical Center's neurosurgery department was recognized as high performing by U.S. News & World Report in 2019-20. The department of neurological surgery includes Orange County's first comprehensive stroke center, granted certification by The Joint Commission, as well as active research in neuro-oncology and spinal cord injury. The department frequently collaborates with other research organizations, such as UC Irvine's Reeve-Irvine Research Center, which is working to find new treatments for spinal cord injury.

UCLA Medical Center (Los Angeles). As UCLA Health's flagship hospital, UCLA Medical Center's neurosurgery department has ranked as one of the top neurosurgery programs in the nation for over 20 consecutive years by U.S. News & World Report. The department has its own neurosurgery app designed for patients with information about their physicians, procedures and hospital amenities. UCLA's Spine Center is also designated a Blue Distinction Center for Spine Surgery by Blue Shield of California.

UCSF Medical Center (San Francisco). The department of neurological surgery at UCSF Medical Center has 14 specialties, including pediatric neurosurgery. In 2011, the department developed the Quality Improvement and Patient Safety initiative with the goal of becoming a national leader in neurological surgery quality. The hospital is piloting an enhanced recovery after surgery pathway for cranial surgery as well as an opioid stewardship program. UCSF's Spine Center is also one of the largest spine centers in the country and sees over 10,000 patients a year. The department of neurological surgery at UCSF was recognized in 2019-20 as one of the top three neurosurgery programs in the country by U.S. News & World Report, which also ranks the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospitals among the top hospitals for pediatric neurosurgery in the nation.

UF Health (Gainesville, Fla.). The UF Health Spine Program provides comprehensive outpatient and inpatient treatment options at one location that features 17 neurosurgeons, three neurosurgery ORs, two neurosurgery hybrid interventional ORs and 48 private ICU patient rooms. The hospital provides complete spine services including the treatment of degenerative spinal diseases, spinal tumors as well as craniocervical junction anomalies and performs more than 1,000 procedures annually. For its 2019-20 rankings, U.S. News & World Report named UF Health Shands Hospital in Gainesville the No. 2 hospital in Florida, and it was ranked among the top in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery.

UK HealthCare Albert B. Chandler Hospital (Lexington, Ky.). UK Neurosurgery features nine neurosurgeons providing care for complex conditions including spinal tumors and deformities, stroke, ALS, and epilepsy. UK HealthCare Albert B. Chandler Hospital was ranked the No. 1 hospital in the state for neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report's best hospitals survey for 2019-20. UK Neurosurgery collaborates with the UK Kentucky Neuroscience Institute on several research initiatives and is currently enrolling participants in ALS and epilepsy clinical trials.

UNC REX Hospital (Raleigh, N.C.). REX Neurosurgery & Spine Specialists features a team of 12 orthopedic spine and neurosurgeons providing comprehensive neurosurgical care including spinal fusion, minimally invasive spine surgery and reconstructive spine surgery. The department performs thousands of procedures each year and has been certified as a comprehensive stroke care center by The Joint Commission since 2011. UNC REX bolstered the department in the past year with the addition of an on-site spine physical therapist and a spine navigator to determine whether patients need imaging, surgery or physical therapy.

University Hospitals (Cleveland). The staff University Hospitals includes 11 orthopedic spine and neurosurgeons focused on providing exceptional patient care. The University Hospitals Spine Institute collaborates with the UH Neurological Institute, which features 13 centers of excellence and provides innovative neurosurgical therapies including CyberKnife, Gamma Knife and the NeuroBlate System. University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center was ranked among the best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in the nation by U.S. News & World Report in 2019-20.

University of Alabama Hospital at Birmingham. UAB Hospital at Birmingham is widely recognized for its spine care and brain cancer research, and its specialists treat more than 4,000 patients annually. UAB Neurology and Neurosurgery has eight comprehensive divisions and seven centers that care for 26,000 patients per year. The neurosurgery department is also responsible for around 5,000 procedures annually for both pediatric and adult patients. It features research faculty and physician scientists who collaborate to advance research in conditions such as Parkinson's disease, spinal cord injury and neurovascular disorders.

University of California Davis Medical Center (Sacramento). Spine and neurosurgeons at UC Davis Medical Center actively participate in research and clinical trials spanning a range of areas including lumbar fusion, traumatic brain injury and thoracic spinal cord injury. UC Davis Health's neurosurgery department features 13 physicians on its clinical faculty and its brain tumor program incorporates 19 physicians from several subspecialties to provide optimum care for adult and pediatric patients with tumors of the nervous system. The UC Davis Medical Center ranked among the best hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery in U.S. News & World Report's 2019-20 list.

University of Colorado Hospital (Aurora). UCHealth Spine Center at the Anschutz Medical Campus is staffed by renowned spine and neurosurgeons who have built a comprehensive and award-winning program. The hospital is certified by The Joint Commission as a comprehensive stroke center and its epilepsy program is rated as a Level 4 center by the National Association of Epilepsy Centers and earned the 2019 Get With the Guidelines Stroke Gold Plus Elite Plus award from the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association for outstanding care. The department of neurosurgery features 23 physicians and U.S. News & World Report ranked UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital among the best in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery for 2019-20.

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics (Iowa City). The UI Spine Center has a robust program with 10 orthopedic spine and neurosurgeons who participate in next-generation surgical technology investigations to stay on the forefront of spine care. The hospital has earned the Blue Cross Blue Distinction Center+ designation for spine surgery and the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine is often ranked in the top 10 in National Institutes of Health funding for faculty members, including neurosurgery. The neurosurgery department specializes in the surgical treatment of degenerative spine pathology, epilepsy, brain and spinal cord tumors and was designated a center of excellence by the Parkinson's Foundation in 2018.

University of Kansas Hospital (Kansas City). The department of neurosurgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center is equipped with virtual reality systems and a 3D printer to assist neurosurgeons in planning procedures and training physicians in the latest technology. The hospital includes 11 neurosurgeons and a 14-physician neurosurgery residency program. It also has a robust spine center, the Marc A. Asher, MD, Comprehensive Spine Center, which opened in 2008 and includes 27 exam rooms, four diagnostic rooms and a 4,000-square-foot outpatient rehabilitation gym.

University of Miami (Fla.) Hospital and Clinics. Neurosurgeons at University of Miami Hospital and Clinics see more than 14,000 patients and perform over 4,000 procedures annually. The hospital was named among the best hospitals in Florida by U.S. News & World Report in 2019-20 and scored as a high-performing facility in the departments of neurology and neurosurgery. The hospital integrates the latest innovations into its neurosurgical research programs including robotics, 3D interoperative imaging and deep brain stimulation.

UW Health (Madison, Wis.). The neurosurgery residency program was founded at the University of Wisconsin's department of surgery in 1942 and has been in operation ever since. UW Health features 14 neurosurgeons, 12 research faculty and two fellows. Neurosurgeons in the department see more than 1,200 brain tumor patients per year in collaboration with the UW Carbone Cancer Center. The department focuses on both clinical and investigative aspects of care for neurological diseases and is currently participating in a range of clinical trials involving brain tumors, stroke, spinal cord injury and cervical spondylotic myelopathy.

University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics (Salt Lake City). University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics provides the full spectrum of neurosurgical care to patients with cranial and spinal diseases and disorders. The faculty includes 25 physicians who provide a range of services including cerebrovascular, spinal, functional, traumatic, tumor, and pediatric neurosurgery. Physicians at the hospital are actively involved in clinical trials with current projects including pediatric neurosurgery and venous thromboembolism.

University of Virginia Medical Center (Charlottesville). Spine specialists at the University of Virginia Medical Center, in partnership with colleagues from the neurosurgery department, perform more than 1,500 spine procedures each year. The medical center's neurosurgery department is led by Jeffrey Elias, MD, who was honored as the 2018 Edlich-Henderson Innovator of the Year by the UVA Licensing & Ventures Group. At the university, Dr. Elias pioneered the use of focused ultrasound to treat essential tremor and led a clinical trial that resulted in FDA approval of the treatment.

UW Medicine (Seattle). The department of neurological surgery at UW Medicine is the primary referral center for patients in Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho who have complex neurological conditions. Twenty neurosurgeons, 15 neuroscientists and 79 adjunct clinical research faculty staff the department, and an additional 20 physicians are in its neurological surgery residency program. The neurological surgery department's outreach initiatives include National Institutes of Health-sponsored brain injury research in five Latin American countries.

UW Health (Madison, Wis.). In 1993, spine specialists at UW Health developed a minimally invasive treatment for spinal fusion surgery, becoming one of the first institutions to perform the procedure in the world and solidifying the health system as a leader in minimally invasive spine surgery. In addition to spine, providers at UW Health care for more than 1,200 brain tumor patients each year, working with the UW Carbone Cancer Center when additional treatment is needed. For 2019-20, U.S. News & World Report listed UW Health among the top 50 hospitals in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery.

UPMC (Pittsburgh). Part of the UPMC Neurological Institute, the UPMC department of neurosurgery is one of the largest academic neurosurgical providers in the nation, with more than 11,000 procedures performed annually. Among its accolades, the department ranks as one of the highest in the country in National Institutes of Health funding, and the department's chair, Robert Friedlander, MD, was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 2018. U.S. News & World Report ranked UPMC's Presbyterian Shadyside hospital in Pittsburgh among the nation's top 50 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery for 2019-20.

UR Medicine (Rochester, N.Y.). Patients across New York's Finger Lakes, Southern Tier and Western New York regions are served by UR Medicine Neurosurgery. At UR Medicine's Spine Center, physicians see more than 19,000 patients annually. In 2019, researchers led by the director of the hospital's department of neurosurgery's Translation Pair Research Program were selected to help the National Institutes of Health create a nonaddictive treatment for pain through clinical trials.

UT Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas). The Peter O'Donnell Jr. Brain Institute, part of the department of neurological surgery at UT Southwestern Medical Center, ranks No. 15 in the nation for neurology and neurosurgery, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2019-20 list. The department's neuro-oncology program is supported by the Annette G. Strauss Center for Neuro-Oncology and collaborates with the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center. In 2018, the Decherd Foundation awarded the hospital an endowment to create an annual award to recognize exceptional care for neurotrauma patients at UT Southwestern's teaching hospital, Dallas-based Parkland Memorial Hospital.

Vanderbilt University Medical Center (Nashville, Tenn.). In addition to 21 residents, the neurological surgery department at Vanderbilt University Medical Center has 16 physician faculty members who are part of its 32-member advance practice and research team. The department sees more than 5,000 surgeries and procedures each year. In 2019, neurological surgery researchers at Vanderbilt, supported by the National Institutes of Health, for the first time found improvements in brain networks after surgery in 15 people with temporal lobe epilepsy.

VCU Medical Center (Richmond, Va.). With a 13-physician faculty, the Virginia Commonwealth University department of neurosurgery at VCU Medical Center is home to a new concept of outpatient medicine for orthopedic and neurological conditions. The VCU Health Neuroscience, Orthopaedic and Wellness Center, dubbed the "N.O.W. Center," aims to offer patient-centered care, using new software to help providers manage patients' progress during visits. The neurosurgery department at VCU Medical Center has been recognized by U.S. News & World Report, which named the hospital among the top 50 in the country for neurology and neurosurgery for 2018-19.

Vidant Medical Center (Greenville, N.C.). Vidant Medical Center is home to the only neuroscience intensive care unit in eastern North Carolina, as well as a specialized neuroscience rehabilitation unit. The hospital's neurosurgery department has 19 physicians and healthcare professionals. In April 2019, one of Vidant's neurosurgery department members co-authored a 12-month study of the use of a new neuro-spinal scaffold to treat acute thoracic complete spinal cord injury.

Wake Forest Baptist Health (Winston-Salem, N.C.). Every year, physicians at Wake Forest Baptist Health's spine center perform more than 1,000 surgeries on patients in need of treatment for back and neck disorders. Wake Forest Baptist Health is home to one of the nation's leading Gamma Knife Centers and is one of the few centers in the country to use deep brain stimulation to treat movement disorders, brain tumors, depression and Tourette syndrome. Additionally, the hospital's neurosurgery department has two neurosurgeons who specialize in pediatric care.

See original here:
100 hospitals and health systems with great neurosurgery and spine programs | 2019 - Becker's Hospital Review

Trustees approve project to update the Eppley Center – MSUToday

Michigan State Universitys Board of Trustees today authorized a $10.3 million project to update the infrastructure and functionality of the Eppley Center in the universitys Business College Complex.

The 58-year-old building will be reconfigured to bring undergraduate advising and other student academic support services, as well as computer labs, into one location a move made possible by the recent completion of the Edward J. Minskoff Pavilion.

Because the buildings original mechanical systems are inefficient or inoperable, the center will receive safety and energy efficiency improvements including LED light fixtures, fire alarm and suppression systems and heating and cooling systems.

"It is vitally important that the critical support services our students need are as accessible as possible, said Broad College of Business Dean Sanjay Gupta. We've made a commitment to align our facilities to promote student success, and this investment will deliver on that for years to come.

Trustees and other leaders also recognized 17 students with academic achievement awards for earning 4.0 GPAs at the close of their last semester at MSU. Also honored were the universitys 20th Rhodes Scholar and 19th Marshall Scholar.

Rhodes Scholar Anna Esenther is a 2019 Honors College graduate with degrees in economics, psychology, history, education and statistics. She will study economics at the University of Oxford and hopes to leverage her selection to amplify the voices of teachers and underrepresented populations in economics.

Marshall Scholar Emily Steffke is an Honors College senior majoring in neuroscience in the College of Natural Science and English in the College of Arts and Letters. She is an undergraduate researcher at MSUs Institute for Quantitative Health Science and Engineering.

It is such a pleasure to acknowledge and congratulate such an impressive group of scholars, MSU President Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D., said. Their accomplishments reflect so well on the university and illustrate the caliber of our programs and students.

President Stanley and several trustees also welcomed new trustee, Renee Knake, who was appointed earlier this month by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Ms. Knakes experience in higher education, ethics and diversity issues will be great assets in supporting our efforts to build a safer, more respectful and more welcoming campus while striving to enhance student success and improve our community, Stanley said.

Other board activity included:

The next board meeting will be Feb. 14, 2020.

Read more:
Trustees approve project to update the Eppley Center - MSUToday

Depletion of microbiome-derived molecules in the host using Clostridium genetics – Science Magazine

Chun-Jun Guo

Department of Bioengineering and ChEM-H, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Jill Roberts Institute for Research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, NY 10021, USA.

Breanna M. Allen

Graduate Program in Biomedical Sciences, Departments of Otolaryngology and Microbiology and Immunology, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Kamir J. Hiam

Graduate Program in Biomedical Sciences, Departments of Otolaryngology and Microbiology and Immunology, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Dylan Dodd

Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

Will Van Treuren

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Steven Higginbottom

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Kazuki Nagashima

Department of Bioengineering and ChEM-H, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

Curt R. Fischer

Department of Bioengineering and ChEM-H, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Justin L. Sonnenburg

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Matthew H. Spitzer

Graduate Program in Biomedical Sciences, Departments of Otolaryngology and Microbiology and Immunology, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

Michael A. Fischbach

Department of Bioengineering and ChEM-H, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.

View post:
Depletion of microbiome-derived molecules in the host using Clostridium genetics - Science Magazine

Genetic Risk Scores May Predict Severity and Outcomes in People with Lupus – Lupus Foundation of America

In a new study, a high genetic risk score (GRS) was associated with an increased risk of organ damage, renal (kidney) dysfunction and mortality in people with lupus. Organ damage, cardiovascular disease, proliferative nephritis (kidney lesions), end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and presence of antiphospholipid antibodies were successfully predicted by a high GRS in people with lupus. GRSs have been applied in several fields of medicine and may be a potential tool for prediction of disease severity in lupus.

Clinical data from 1,001 people with lupus were analyzed. Their health outcomes and cumulative genetic risk were compiled and compared against the GRSs of 5,524 people with lupus and 9,859 healthy people. Lupus was more prevalent in the high-, compared with the low-GRS group Patients in the high GRS group had a 6-year earlier average disease onset, displayed higher prevalence of damage accrual, ERSD, proliferative nephritis, certain types of autoantibodies and positive lupus anticoagulant test, compared with patients in the low-GRS group. Survival analysis showed earlier onset of the first organ damage, first cardiovascular event, nephritis, ESRD and decreased overall survival in people with high GRSs compared to those with low scores.

Genetic profiling may be useful for predicting outcomes in people with lupus and aid in the clinical decision process. Understanding the genetic contribution to permanent organ damage is important for understanding how lupus develops. Learn more about the genetics of lupus.

Read the study

Go here to read the rest:
Genetic Risk Scores May Predict Severity and Outcomes in People with Lupus - Lupus Foundation of America

ACMG recommends evaluations of breast cancer patients before genetic testing – News-Medical.net

According to a statement on behalf of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) published Dec. 13 in the organization's official journal, Genetics in Medicine, there is insufficient evidence to recommend universal genetic testing for BRCA1/2 alone or in combination with multi-gene panels for all breast cancer patients.

The guidance from the ACMG differs from a consensus guideline issued in February by the American Society of Breast Surgeons, which recommended genetic testing for all newly diagnosed patients with breast cancer. The ACMG recommends evaluations before genetic testing.

What we are saying is that all women with breast cancer should be evaluated for the need for genetic testing based on existing clinical criteria."

Tuya Pal, MD

Pal is one of the lead authors and associate director of Cancer Health Disparities at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center.

The group wrote the statement on behalf of the ACMG Professional Practice and Guidelines Committee.

"We expect that the evidence to support testing may evolve at different rates for different genes, and we expect that therapeutic indications will play a major role in the incorporation of genes to multi-gene panels," Pal and co-authors stated in the paper.

"Consequently, as guidelines for testing are developed, it is critical to ensure they are supported by evidence and resources supporting strategies that include screening, medical and/or surgical care as indicated. Ideally, professional societies should work together to weigh data, formulate and harmonize evidence-based recommendations and seek to reduce barriers to care."

The ACMC document stressed the importance of genetic testing and said all breast cancer patients should be evaluated to determine whether germline genetic testing for hereditary breast cancer is warranted.

They noted that only a small proportion of the at-risk population for hereditary breast cancers has been tested, with one estimate indicating that less than 10% of adults with BRCA1/2 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in the U.S. have been identified. Testing rates are disproportionately lower among racial and ethnic minority populations.

"As genetic testing now has the potential to guide cancer care, it has become imperative to ensure that all populations may benefit from these tremendous advances and that existing disparities in testing do not widen," Pal said. "In order to ensure this, we need to be intentional in developing and disseminating efforts such that improved outcomes based on genetic testing are experienced across populations."

The ACMG document provided the following guidance for clinicians to consider:

In discussions with patients, clinicians should be aware of the current insufficient evidence to support genetic testing for all patients with breast cancer.

After identification of a pathogenic or likely pathogenic mutation in moderately penetrant breast cancer genes, clinicians should recognize that guidance is based on consensus recommendations and that enhanced screening, to date, has not been associated with enhanced survival or earlier stage diagnosis.

Whenever genetic testing is performed on a clinical basis, the testing should include full gene sequencing and be conducted in a lab certified or accredited by either the College of American Pathologists or Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments.

Patients should be counseled about the implications of genetic testing by trained genetics professionals or health care providers with special expertise in cancer genetics principles.

Patients who have a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in an established breast cancer associated gene should be educated about the importance of cascade testing of family members.

See the rest here:
ACMG recommends evaluations of breast cancer patients before genetic testing - News-Medical.net

Points to consider: Should germline genetic testing be offered to all patients with breast cancer? – News-Medical.net

Should germline genetic testing be offered to all patients with breast cancer? The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) addresses this important question in a new statement published in Genetics in Medicine, "Points to Consider: Is There Evidence to Support BRCA1/2 and Other Inherited Breast Cancer Genetic Testing for All Breast Cancer Patients? A Statement of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics."

Of all cancers that develop in women in the United States (US), breast cancer has the highest incidence, regardless of race or ethnicity. Approximately 5-10% of breast cancers are estimated to result from hereditary causes, the majority of which are attributed to pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 (BRCA1/2) genes, although variants in other genes such as PALB2, TP53, PTEN, CDH1, CHEK2 and ATM also contribute.

Identification of inherited cancer risk empowers individuals and their families to prevent cancers or detect them early. Furthermore, incorporating genetic testing results into patients' care plans has the potential to guide treatment and improve outcomes. But testing alone will not improve outcomes. Implementation of appropriate care following testing is required and data are needed to generate evidence that informs clinical practice.

As progress in precision medicine continues, it is important that patients receive accurate information to ensure the implementation of risk reducing strategies and evidence-based cancer genomics best practices. The purpose of this new ACMG points-to-consider document is to outline the rationale for ongoing support of existing evidence-based guidelines built on a risk stratification approach while data related to broader testing strategies continues to emerge.

Medical geneticists play an important role in facilitating the best care and practices of patients with cancer or a predisposition to develop cancer. This Points to Consider document acknowledges the complexity of professional organization guidelines in the cancer space. Medical geneticists are uniquely qualified to analyze the literature that informs professional organizations and their guidelines. Implementation of cancer genetic testing guidelines is best when carried out with input and in many cases under the direction of a medical geneticist with cancer expertise."

Anthony R. Gregg, MD, MBA, FACOG, FACMG, ACMG President

The new ACMG document provides points for clinicians to consider in the context of testing breast cancer patients for inherited cancer predisposition, including:

The points-to-consider document concludes by stating, "With the advances in sequencing technologies and increasing access to and expanding indications for genetic testing, it remains critical to ensure that implementation of testing is based on evidence. Currently, there is insufficient evidence to recommend genetic testing for BRCA1/2 alone or in combination with multi-gene panels for all breast cancer patients. Ideally, professional societies should work together to weigh data, formulate and harmonize evidence-based recommendations, and seek to reduce barriers to care...Moreover...the implementation of precision medicine approaches across oncology must also consider a means by which the promise of genetic testing for inherited cancer predisposition may be realized by all populations, regardless of race, ethnicity and ability to pay."

Source:

Journal reference:

Pal, T., et al. (2019) Points to consider: is there evidence to support BRCA1/2 and other inherited breast cancer genetic testing for all breast cancer patients? A statement of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG). Genetics in Medicine. doi.org/10.1038/s41436-019-0712-x.

Read the original:
Points to consider: Should germline genetic testing be offered to all patients with breast cancer? - News-Medical.net

1933 Industries signs second licensing deal with OG DNA Genetics – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

The deal will grant 1933 Industries license to the DNA brand for the production and sale of hemp-derived CBD products

1933 Industries Inc () (OTCMKTS:TGIFF) announced Thursday that it has signed a second licensing agreement with OG DNA Genetics, a globally recognized leading cannabis brand.

The agreement will grant 1933 Industries the license to the DNA brand for the production and sale of hemp-derived CBD products signaling DNAs first entry into the cannabidiol market. DNA will leverage 1933s vast distribution network of over 800 retail outlets throughout the US.

In 2018, the Farm Bill was passed through legislation federally legalizing the cultivation of hemp and permitting the sale of hemp-derived CBD products. This gives DNA the ability to expand itsreach into the rapidly developing CBD market and provide the highest-quality products to all 50 states and globally.

We are excited to expand our partnership with 1933, one of the leaders in the CBD wellness space, said Don Morris, co-founder of DNA Genetics. It feels good to build on an already strong relationship with a like-minded company committed to putting out the best quality products.

Chris Rebentisch, CEO of 1933 Industries, said DNA has the best quality products in the market.

Its fitting that we would work together to help bring the legacy brand into the CBD wellness space. We have an amazing lineup of products and are excited to leverage DNAs global reach through this agreement, Rebentisch said.

For more than 15 years, genetics developed by DNA have won more than 200 awards in all categories at the most prestigious cannabis events around the world, making DNA the global standard in breeding and growing truly best-in-class strains.

These awards include the High Times Top 10 Strain of the Year,which was inducted into The High Times seedbank hall of fame in 2009, the High Times 100 list of the most influential people in the industry and the High Times Trailer Blazers Award, for contributions made towards uniting the fields of entrepreneurship, politics and medicine.

1933 Industries, based in Chilliwack, British Columbia, owns licensed medical and adult-use cannabis cultivation and production assets, proprietary hemp-based, CBD-infused branded products, CBD extraction services and a specialized cannabis advisory firm.

Shares recently traded up 2.6% to C$0.20 in Canada.

--ADDS share price--

Contact the author: [emailprotected]

Follow him on Twitter @PatrickMGraham

More here:
1933 Industries signs second licensing deal with OG DNA Genetics - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Genetic Testing Company Acquired by Company With Ties to FBI and Law Enforcement – Truthout

This week, GEDmatch, a genetic genealogy company that gained notoriety for giving law enforcement access to its customers DNA data, quietly informed its users it is now operated by Verogen, Inc., a company expressly formed two years ago to market next-generation [DNA] sequencing technology to crime labs.

What this means for GEDmatchs 1.3 million users and for the 60% of white Americans who share DNA with those users remains to be seen.

GEDmatch allows users to upload an electronic file containing their raw genotyped DNA data so that they can compare it to other users data to find biological family relationships. It estimates how close or distant those relationships may be (e.g., a direct connection, like a parent, or a distant connection, like a third cousin), and it enables users to determine where, along each chromosome, their DNA may be similar to another user. It also predicts characteristics like ethnicity.

Get Truthouts daily edition delivered to your inbox.

An estimated 30 million people have used genetic genealogy databases like GEDmatch to identify biological relatives and build a family tree, and law enforcement officers have been capitalizing on all that freely available data in criminal investigations. Estimates are that genetic genealogy sites were used in around 200 cases just last year. For many of those cases, officers never sought a warrant or any legal process at all.

Earlier this year, after public outcry, GEDmatch changed its previous position allowing for warrantless law enforcement searches, opted out all its users from those searches, and required all users to expressly opt in if they wanted to allow access to their genetic data. Only a small percentage did. But opting out has not prevented law enforcement from accessing consumers genetic data, as long as they can get a warrant, which one Orlando, Florida officer did last summer.

Law enforcement has argued that people using genetic genealogy services have no expectation of privacy in their genetic data because users have willingly shared their data with the genetics company and with other users and have consented to a companys terms of service. But the Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in Carpenter v. United States.

In Carpenter, the Court ruled that even though our cell phone location data is shared with or stored by a phone company, we still have a reasonable expectation of privacy in it because of all the sensitive and private information it can reveal about our lives. Similarly, genetic data can reveal a whole host of extremely private and sensitive information about people, from their likelihood to inherit specific diseases to where their ancestors are from to whether they have a sister or brother they never knew about. Researchers have even theorized at one time or another that DNA may predict race, intelligence, criminality, sexual orientation, and political ideology. Even if later disproved, officials may rely on outdated research like this to make judgements about and discriminate against people. Because genetic data is so sensitive, we have an expectation of privacy in it, even if other people can access it.

However, whether individual users of genetic genealogy databases have consented to law enforcement searches is somewhat beside the point. In all cases that we know of so far, law enforcement isnt looking for the person who uploaded their DNA to a consumer site, they are looking for that persons distant relatives people who never could have consented to this kind of use of their genetic data because they dont have any control over the DNA they happen to share with the sites users.

That means these searches are nothing more than fishing expeditions through millions of innocent peoples DNA. They are not targeted at finding specific users or based on individualized suspicion a fact the police admit because they dont know who their suspect is. They are supported only by the hope that a crime scene sample might somehow be genetically linked to DNA submitted to a genetic genealogy database by a distant relative, which might give officers a lead in a case. Theres a real question whether a warrant that allows this kind of search could ever meet the particularity requirements of the Fourth Amendment.

These are also dragnet searches, conducted under general warrants, and no different from officers searching every house in a town with a population of 1.3 million on the off chance that one of those houses could contain evidence useful to finding the perpetrator of a crime. With or without a warrant, the Fourth Amendment prohibits searches like this in the physical world, and it should prohibit genetic dragnets like this one as well.

We need to think long and hard as a society about whether law enforcement should be allowed to access genetic genealogy databases at all even with a warrant. These searches impact millions of Americans. Although GEDmatch likely only encompasses about 0.5% of the U.S. adult population, research shows 60% of white Americans can already be identified from its 1.3 million users. This same research shows that once GEDmatchs users encompass just 2% of the U.S. population, 90% of white Americans will be identifiable.

Although many authorities once argued these kinds of searches would only be used as a way to solve cold cases involving the most terrible and serious crimes, that is changing; this year, police used genetic genealogy to implicate a teenager for a sexual assault. Next year it could be used to identify political or environmental protestors. Unlike established criminal DNA databases like the FBIs CODIS database, there are currently few rules governing how and when genetic genealogy searching may be used.

We should worry about these searches for another reason: they can implicate people for crimes they didnt commit. Although police used genetic searching to finally identify the man they believe is the Golden State Killer, an earlier search in the same case identified a different person. In 2015, a similar search in a different case led police to suspect an innocent man. Even without genetic genealogy searches, DNA matches may lead officers to suspect and jail the wrong person, as happened in a California case in 2012. That can happen because we shed DNA constantly and because our DNA may be transferred from one location to another, possibly ending up at the scene of a crime, even if we were never there.

All of this is made even more concerning by the recent acquisition of GEDmatch by a company whose main purpose is to help the police solve crimes. The ability to research family history and disease risk shouldnt carry the threat that our data will be accessible to police or others and used in ways we never could have foreseen. Genetic genealogy searches by law enforcement invade our privacy in unique ways they allow law enforcement to access information about us that we may not even know ourselves, that we have no ability to hide, and that could reveal more about us in the future than scientists know now. These searches should never be allowed even with a warrant.

Visit link:
Genetic Testing Company Acquired by Company With Ties to FBI and Law Enforcement - Truthout

University of Iowa professor honored for her work in immunology – UI The Daily Iowan

University of Iowa professor of microbiology and immunology Gail Bishop has been named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science for her work in the field of immunology.

After a long career in science, University of Iowa professor of microbiology and immunology Gail Bishop was named a 2019 fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science after nomination from her peers.

Bishop has worked at the UI for 30 years and studied T and B lymphocytes, which are white blood cells that moderate the bodys defense against pathogens. Through her work, she discovered one of the molecules she was studying was important in preventing a certain type of lymphocyte from turning into a tumor.

Bishop first came to the UI in 1989 as an assistant professor and became active in the cancer center. She was then named the Associate Director for Basic Science Research in the Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The lymphocytes she studies are the microbes in the body that remember what immunizing factors they encounter through vaccinations or natural infection, Bishop said. She is interested in signals the lymphocytes get from other cells and environmental cues that regulate an immune response, she said.

Her research on B lymphocytes led her to her work in the cancer center, Bishop said. Using mouse models, she and the research team removed the molecule that regulates the amount of B lymphocytes in the mouses system, she said.

The mice had large lymph nodes and developed a type of tumor called cell lymphoma, which is the most common type of white blood cell cancer in humans, Bishop said.

Related: UI professor receives grant to train medical field in collaboration with language interpreters

I think you have to really enjoy the science itself and not be in it for prizes or fame or anything like that, Bishop said, because although those things do occasionally come, theyre so intermittent and so unpredictable that if that was your goal, youd be miserable all the time.

Through her time as a researcher, a number of people have worked in her lab. Bruce Hostager, a current researcher in her lab, started working with Bishop when he was a postdoctoral student and has been working with her continuously for 25 years.

Through his time working with Bishop, Hostager has seen the way they conduct research change, he said. The technology used in editing the genetics in mice models has evolved to make their work easier, he added.

Her research is one thing that shes being recognized for, but also for some of her service to the scientific community, both nationally and here at the university, Hostager said.

Stanley Perlman, one of Bishops colleagues at the UI, nominated her to be honored as a fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science because of her contributes to immunology.

There is not a large number of women working in biology, Perlman said. More and more women are working in biology at the college level, but as you go up the hierarchy there are a lot of men, he added.

Seeing Bishop be honored as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science may allow her to serve as a role model for women in science, Perlman said.

I just think recognizing Gails talents and contributions is important, even without it being a role model for anyone or affecting anyone else, Perlman said.

Read more here:
University of Iowa professor honored for her work in immunology - UI The Daily Iowan