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Zootaxa

Magnolia Press

Preprints posted in the last 7 days, ranked by how well they match Zootaxa's content profile, based on 10 papers previously published here. The average preprint has a 0.01% match score for this journal, so anything above that is already an above-average fit.

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Optimizing calcein marking in the common periwinkle (Littorina littorea) for repeated-measures and mark-recapture studies

Ahlefeld, G. K.; Benavides, C. E.; Chioffi, M. A.; Furtney, F.; Goerck de Carvalho Macedo, S.; Korn, C. E. H.; Marra-Perrault, G.; McGlashan, E. A. F.; Watts, L. A.; Wilkinson, K. J.; Wells, C. D.

2026-04-13 zoology 10.64898/2026.04.10.717815 medRxiv
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Calcein is a fluorescent marker commonly used to label growing calcified structures in marine organisms, but its efficacy is species- and context-specific. We evaluated calcein marking success and survival in the common periwinkle (Littorina littorea) during winter in the Gulf of Maine. Snails were immersed for 24 h in seawater containing 0, 50, or 100 mg L-1 calcein and scored for fluorescent marks 22 days later. Overall marking success was low (12.5% of exposed snails evaluated) but was strongly size-dependent: each 1 mm increase in shell length reduced the odds of acquiring a mark by 27%. Among exposed snails, higher calcein concentration (100 mg L-1) produced significantly brighter marks than the lower concentration (50 mg L-1). Survival was 100% across all treatments. The low overall marking rate likely reflects suppressed shell growth at winter temperatures. We recommend 100 mg L-1 calcein with a 24-h immersion for marking L. littorea and suggest that marking during warmer months would improve efficacy across a broader size range.

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Mapping research on Indigenous peoples, traditional knowledge, and biodiversity conservation in the Amazon: gaps and Indigenous knowledge co-production

Santos, J. V. A. S.; Bomfim, F. F.; Monteles, J. S.; Guerrero-Moreno, M. A.; Dantas, Y. C.; da Silva, E. C.; Brito, J. d. S.; Oliveira-Junior, J. M. B.; Panara, K. K.; Panara, S.; Panara, K.; Panara, S.; Panara, K.; Panara, K.; Panara, S.; Panara, N.; Panara, P.; Panara, P. P.; Panara, T.; Ferreira-Satere, T.; Kumaruara, A.; Kuikuro, Y.; Costa, A. R. O.; Sarlo, L.; Coutinho, B.; Araujo, R. d.; Pinheiro, R.; Junqueira, P.; Evangelista, I. M. A.; Dantas Santos, M. P.; Mendes-Oliveira, A. C.; Maschio, G.; Prata, E.; Martinelli, b. M.; Rodrigues, D.; Montag, L.; Michelan, T.; Juen, L.

2026-04-14 ecology 10.64898/2026.04.13.718171 medRxiv
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O_LIIndigenous peoples play a central role in biodiversity knowledge and conservation, yet their participation in scientific research remains underrepresented. Understanding how Indigenous peoples, traditional knowledge, and Indigenous territories are portrayed in the scientific literature is essential for developing more equitable and culturally grounded conservation strategies. C_LIO_LIWe conducted a bibliometric analysis of 94 articles on biodiversity conservation in the Amazon, published between 1997 and 2025, indexed in Scopus and Web of Science. We examined temporal trends, geographic distribution, institutional leadership, Indigenous co-authorship, focal ecosystems and taxa, and the main contributions attributed to Indigenous peoples. Indigenous perspectives were integrated into this analysis through a participatory approach. C_LIO_LIScientific production increased after 2010. Research leadership remains concentrated in institutions from the Global North, even though Brazil, Ecuador, and Peru were the most frequently studied countries. Indigenous co-authorship was identified in only 6.4 % of the studies. Most studies focused on plants, mammals, and birds, whereas aquatic environments and groups such as insects, amphibians, and reptiles received comparatively less attention. The main contributions attributed to Indigenous peoples were related to community-based monitoring and management (41.48%) and cultural practices and traditional ecological knowledge (38.19%). C_LIO_LIThese findings show that Indigenous peoples are widely recognized as knowledge holders and conservation actors, but are still rarely included as authors or research partners. Our study highlights persistent geographic, epistemic, and collaborative asymmetries in Amazonian biodiversity research. Conservation science and policy will be stronger, fairer, and more effective when they move beyond documenting Indigenous knowledge towards supporting Indigenous leadership, equitable partnerships, and inclusive co-production of knowledge. C_LI

3
Evaluating the impact of school-based interventions on youth loneliness: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Sticpewich, L.; Stuttard, H.; Bu, F.; Fancourt, D.; Hayes, D.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.15.26349177 medRxiv
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Aims: Youth loneliness is a prevalent global health concern with lifelong health ramifications. Schools, as children's primary peer environments, are promising settings for loneliness interventions. However, school-based interventions are highly heterogeneous and no review to date has evaluated their effect on loneliness specifically. Methods: A systematic review was conducted to identify studies of school-based interventions measuring loneliness as an outcome in children and young people aged up to 18. Meta-analyses were conducted using a random-effects model to pool effect sizes and examine the significance of intervention characteristics and study design. Reported implementation factors were extracted and narratively synthesised. Results: Thirty-eight studies were included in meta-analysis, of which 19 were randomized controlled trials, ten were non-randomized controlled, and nine were single group studies. A small-to-moderate effect estimate was found, Hedges' g = -0.42 [95% CI: -0.71, -0.13], p = .006, and sub-group analyses indicated that differences in study design and quality did not result in significantly different effect estimates. Psychological interventions, followed by social and emotional skills training, produced significantly higher effects estimates compared with other intervention types. Conclusions: Findings indicate that school-based interventions are effective in reducing youth loneliness. However, study heterogeneity, reporting inconsistencies, and a wide prediction interval indicates this finding should be interpreted with caution. Future research may benefit from improved measurement and reporting of implementation factors, particularly dosage and fidelity.

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The single item physical activity (SIPA) measure: a major role for global surveillance and community program evaluation

Bauman, A.; Owen, K.; Messing, S.; Macdonald, H.; Nettlefold, L.; Richards, J.; Vandelanotte, C.; Chen, I.-H.; Cullen, B.; van Buskirk, J.; van Itallie, A.; Coletta, G.; O'Halloran, P.; Randle, E.; Nicholson, M.; Staley, K.; McKay, H. A.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350895 medRxiv
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Military aviation training noise remains understudied despite its widespread impacts across urban, rural, and wilderness areas. The predominance of low-frequency noise and repetitive training can create pervasive noise pollution, yet past research often fails to capture the full range of health and quality-of-life effects. This study analyzed two complaint datasets related to Whidbey Island Naval Air Station noise: U.S. Navy records (2017-2020) and Quiet Skies Over San Juan County data (2021-2023). We analyzed and mapped sentiment intensity from noise complaints relative to modeled annual noise exposure, developed a typology to classify impacts, and modeled the environmental and operational factors influencing complaints. Findings revealed widespread negative sentiment and anger, often beyond the bounds of estimated noise contours, suggesting that annual cumulative noise models inadequately estimate community impacts. Complaints consistently highlighted sleep disturbance, hearing and health concerns, and compromised home environments due to shaking, vibration, and disruption of daily life. Residents also reported significant social, recreational, and work disruptions, along with feelings of fear, helplessness, and concern for children's well-being. The number of complaints were strongly associated with training schedules, with late-night sessions being the strongest predictor. A delayed response pattern suggests residents reach a frustration threshold before filing complaints. Overall, our findings demonstrate persistent negative sentiment and diverse impacts from military aviation noise. Results highlight the need for improved noise metrics, modeling and operational adjustments to mitigate the most disruptive effects.

5
Strengthening School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Programme Implementation: Evidence from Expert Consensus in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya

SERONEY, G. C.; Magak, N. A. G.; Mchunu, G. G.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350916 medRxiv
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Introduction Access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) in schools is critical for child health, learning, and gender equity. In Kenya, the Kenya School Health Policy and the Basic Education Act outline standards for school WASH; however, implementation remains uneven due to inadequate infrastructure, weak inter-sectoral coordination, and limited financing. This study aimed to identify priority components for strengthening school WASH implementation and generate policy-relevant recommendations based on expert consensus in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya. Methods and Results A Delphi technique consisting of two iterative rounds was used to reach expert consensus. In Round 1, 20 purposively selected experts including head teachers, county education officials, public health officers, water and public works officers, and NGO representatives participated in key informant interviews. Emergent themes informed development of a structured Round 2 questionnaire administered through CommCare online app. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics (means, standard deviations, percentage agreement), while qualitative responses underwent thematic coding using NVivo 12. Experts reached strong consensus on essential components required for strengthening school WASH implementation. Key priorities included clear governance structures, designated budget lines, inclusive infrastructure, menstrual hygiene management (MHM), curriculum integration, sustained capacity building, and systematic monitoring. Multi-sectoral collaboration and recognition of best-performing schools were also emphasized as important motivators for compliance and sustainability. Equity considerations particularly the need for disability-friendly facilities and school-community outreach were highlighted as critical. Agreement levels ranged from 74% to 100%, with most items scoring mean values between 4.5 and 4.8 on a 5-point Likert scale, indicating strong consensus among experts. Conclusion strengthening implementation of school WASH in Kenya requires coordinated governance, predictable funding, reliable water systems, inclusive sanitation, strengthened MHM, and consistent monitoring beyond infrastructure investment alone. Integrating these expert-validated priorities within existing national policies offers a practical pathway to improving learner health, reducing absenteeism especially among girls and promoting equitable educational outcomes.

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Accumulation of Benzalkonium Chloride from Disinfectants in Dust Associated with Increased Microbial Tolerance

Yu, J.; Tillema, S.; Akel, M.; Aron, A.; Espinosa, E.; Fisher, S. A.; Branche, T. N.; Mithal, L. B.; Hartmann, E. M.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350823 medRxiv
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Benzalkonium chloride (BAC) is widely used as a disinfectant in cleaning products and is frequently detected in indoor dust. In this study, we assessed dust samples, along with information on cleaning product use, from 24 pregnant participants. Dust samples were analyzed for BAC concentration and microbial tolerance. Different chain lengths of BAC (C12, C14, and C16) were quantified using LC-MS/MS, and bacterial isolates were tested for BAC tolerance using minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) assays. BAC was ubiquitously detected, with C12 and C14 being dominant. Higher BAC concentrations were associated with reported disinfectant use and increased microbial tolerance. These findings suggest that indoor antimicrobial use may promote microbial resistance, highlighting potential exposure risks in indoor environments and the need for further investigation into health and ecological impacts.

7
Baseline Assessment of Drug-Drug Interaction Knowledge Among Healthcare Providers in Kibaha, Tanzania

Salim, A.; Allen, M.; Mariki, K.; Pallangyo, T.; Maina, R.; Mzee, F.; Minja, M.; Msovela, K.; Liana, J.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.11.26350082 medRxiv
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In the context of global health, the ability of frontline primary health providers to identify potential Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs) is a critical component of patient safety. This is particularly true in settings like Tanzania, where drug dispensers often serve as the primary point of contact for healthcare. In this study, we establish a baseline for drug decision-making capabilities across multiple cadres of healthcare providers in Kibaha, Tanzania. We specifically distinguish between the ability to recognize safe drug combinations versus harmful ones. The findings reveal a critical asymmetry in provider performance: while professional training improves the recognition of safe combinations, it provides no advantage over lay intuition (and in some cases, a significant disadvantage) in detecting potentially harmful interactions.

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Female genital cutting and maternal attitudes about it: Testing a cultural disempowerment hypothesis

Strand, P. S.; Trang, J. C.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350909 medRxiv
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Female genital cutting (FGC) is identified within global health and human rights discourse as aligned with gender inequality and female disempowerment. The persistence of FGC in high-prevalence societies is assumed to reflect womens limited influence over decisions concerning their daughters. Yet anthropological research has questioned whether this interpretation adequately reflects how FGC is organized within practicing communities. Across two studies with 176,728 participants from 15 African and Asian countries, we examine whether mothers attitudes toward FGC predict daughters circumcision status and whether this relationship varies with regional FGC prevalence. Multilevel logistic regression models show that maternal attitudes strongly predict daughter circumcision status across both datasets. Contrary to expectations derived from disempowerment frameworks, the association between maternal attitudes and daughter outcomes is not weaker in high-prevalence contexts, it is stronger. These findings suggest that interpretations of FGC as reflecting female disempowerment may mischaracterize the social dynamics of societies in which FGC is common. Policy implications of the findings are discussed.

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Adherence in Monitoring of ART response and turnaround time of results as per HIV viral load testing guideline among people living with HIV in Dar es salaam Region.

Masegese, T.; MUNG'ONG'O, G. S.; Kamala, B.; Anaeli, A.; Bago, M.; Mtoro, M. J.

2026-04-16 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350908 medRxiv
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Background: HIV/AIDS remains a major public health challenge in Tanzania, where viral load suppression among adults on ART stands at 78% and HVL testing uptake among eligible patients is approximately 22%. Since the introduction of the National HVL Testing Guideline in 2015, little has been done to systematically evaluate its implementation. Objective: To evaluate adherence to the National HVL Testing Guideline across CTC clinics in Dar es Salaam Region, covering ART monitoring, documentation, turnaround time, and factors affecting implementation. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2021 across 15 public health facilities with CTC clinics in all five Dar es Salaam districts. A total of 330 PLHIV on ART for more than six months were selected through systematic random sampling with proportional to size allocation, and 45 healthcare providers through convenient sampling. Data were collected via abstraction forms and self-administered questionnaires, and analysed using SPSS Version 23 with descriptive statistics, bivariate analysis, and binary logistic regression. Results: Only 25.1% of patients had their first HVL sample taken at six months as per guideline, with 68.8% delayed beyond six months. Second and third samples were similarly delayed. MoHCDGEC sample tracking forms were absent in 96.7% of facilities and incomplete in 99.1%, and no facility captured specimen acceptance or rejection as site feedback. Turnaround time exceeded the 14-day guideline threshold in 64.5%, 66.7%, and 69.4% of first, second, and third results respectively. Patient negligence (AOR=9.84; 95% CI: 1.83-52.77) and storage (AOR=5.72; 95% CI: 0.94-35.0) were independently associated with guideline adherence. Conclusion: Adherence to the National HVL Testing Guideline in Dar es Salaam is suboptimal across testing timelines, documentation, and turnaround time, with patient negligence and storage capacity as significant determinants. Targeted interventions are needed to strengthen patient education, improve storage infrastructure, enhance documentation systems, and support providers in adhering to guideline-specified timelines.

10
Health Impact Assessment of BRCA1/2 Cascade Screening for the Personalized Prevention of Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancers in Italy

Valz Gris, A.; Giacobini, E.; Tricomi, V.; Rumi, F.; Valentini, I.; Cristiano, A.; Testa, S.; Rosano, A.; Pezzullo, A. M.; Boccia, S.

2026-04-15 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350758 medRxiv
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Introduction Pathogenic germline variants in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes confer a markedly increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer, for which effective preventive strategies are available. Although national and international guidelines recommend BRCA testing and cascade screening of relatives, implementation in Italy remains highly heterogeneous across regions. This study estimates the potential population health and cost impact of achieving full nationwide implementation of BRCA1/2 cascade screening in Italy and identifies key organisational barriers and priority actions for implementation. Methods We conducted a Health Impact Assessment integrating literature review, simulation modelling, and stakeholder consultation. A decision tree and Markov model compared the current heterogeneous implementation of BRCA screening in Italy with an ideal scenario reflecting full adherence to national guidelines, optimal cascade screening, and uptake of preventive strategies. Outcomes included breast and ovarian cancer incidence and mortality, healthcare costs over a lifetime horizon (80 years). Key barriers affecting organisational feasibility, acceptability, and patient well-being were assessed, and a set of priority action recommendations was developed. Results In the ideal scenario, 25,626 eligible cancer patients would undergo BRCA testing annually, identifying 4,254 mutation carriers and enabling cascade testing of 27,650 relatives, of whom 8,682 would be BRCA-positive. Under the current implementation, only 8,807 patients and 2,168 relatives are tested, identifying 948 carriers. Over 30 years, full implementation would prevent 821 cancer cases (- 27.9%) and 1,282 deaths (- 49.7%) compared with the current scenario. While initial expenditures increase due to expanded testing and preventive interventions, cumulative costs decrease over time, resulting in net savings of 5.8 million euros at 30 years and a saving per event avoided (- 2,779 euros). Major implementation barriers include fragmented governance, limited access to genetic counselling, heterogeneous laboratory practices, insufficient professional training, and weak referral pathways. Conclusion Full implementation of BRCA1/2 cascade screening in Italy would yield substantial population health benefits and long-term cost savings. Coordinated national governance, standardised pathways, investment in counselling and workforce capacity, and robust monitoring systems are essential to ensure equitable access and sustainable delivery of personalised cancer prevention. This study demonstrates the value of the HIA methodology for evaluating and guiding genomic prevention policies.

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An independent supervisory safety agent improves reaction of large language models to suicidal ideation

Trivedi, S.; Simons, N. W.; Tyagi, A.; Ramaswamy, A.; Nadkarni, G. N.; Charney, A. W.

2026-04-15 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350757 medRxiv
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Background: Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used in mental health contexts, yet their detection of suicidal ideation is inconsistent, raising patient safety concerns. Objective: To evaluate whether an independent safety monitoring system improves detection of suicide risk compared with native LLM safeguards. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional evaluation using 224 paired suicide-related clinical vignettes presented in a single-turn format under two conditions (with and without structured clinical information). Native LLM safeguard responses were compared with an independent supervisory safety architecture with asynchronous monitoring. The primary outcome was detection of suicide risk requiring intervention. Results: The supervisory system detected suicide risk in 205 of 224 evaluations (91.5%) versus 41 of 224 (18.3%) for native LLM safeguards. Among 168 discordant evaluations, 166 favored the supervisory system and 2 favored the LLM (matched odds ratio {approx}83.0). Both systems detected risk in 39 evaluations, and neither in 17. Detection was highest in scenarios with explicit suicidal ideation and lower in more ambiguous presentations. Conclusions: Native LLM safeguards frequently failed to detect suicide risk in this structured evaluation. An independent monitoring approach substantially improved detection, supporting the role of external safety systems in high-risk mental health applications of LLMs.

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Clinical and Genetic Evaluation of Suicide Death with and without Interpersonal Trauma Exposure

Monson, E. T.; Shabalin, A. A.; Diblasi, E.; Staley, M. J.; Kaufman, E. A.; Docherty, A. R.; Bakian, A. V.; Coon, H.; Keeshin, B. R.

2026-04-16 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350901 medRxiv
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Importance: Suicide is a leading cause of death in the United States with risk strongly influenced by Interpersonal trauma, contributing to treatment resistance and clinical complexity. Objective: To assess clinical and genetic factors in individuals who died from suicide, with and without interpersonal trauma exposure. Design: Individuals who died from suicide with and without trauma were compared in a retrospective case-case design. Prevalence of 19 broad clinical categories was assessed between groups. Results directed selection of 42 clinical subcategories, and 40 polygenic scores (PGS) for further assessment. Multivariable logistic regression models, adjusted for critical covariates and multiple tests, were formulated. Models were also stratified by age group (<26yo and >=26yo), sex, and age/sex. Setting: A population-based evaluation of comorbidity and polygenic scoring in two suicide death subgroups. Participants: A total of 8 738 Utah Suicide Mortality Research Study individuals (23.9% female, average age = 42.6 yo) who died from suicide were evaluated, divided into trauma (N = 1 091) and non-trauma exposed (N = 7 647) individuals. A subset of unrelated European genotyped individuals was also assessed in PGS analyses (Trauma N = 491; Non-trauma N = 3 233). Exposures: Trauma is here defined as interpersonal trauma exposure, including abuse, assault, and neglect from International Classification of Disease coding. Main Outcomes and Measures: Prevalence of comorbid clinical sub/categories and PGS enrichment in trauma versus non-trauma exposed suicide deaths. Results: Overall, trauma-exposed individuals died from suicide earlier (mean age of 38.1 yo versus 43.3 yo; P <0.0001) and were disproportionately female (38% versus 21%, OR = 3.3, CI = 2.9-3.8). Prevalence of asphyxiation and overdose methods, prior suicidality, psychiatric diagnoses, and substance use (OR range = 1.3-3.7) were elevated in trauma exposed individuals who died from suicide. Genetic PGS were also elevated in trauma-exposed individuals who died from suicide for depression, bipolar disorder, cannabis use, PTSD, insomnia, and schizophrenia (OR range = 1.1-1.4) with ADHD and opioid use showing uniquely elevated PGS in trauma exposed males (OR range = 1.2-1.4). Conclusions and Relevance: Results demonstrated multiple convergent lines of age- and sex-specific evidence differentiating trauma-exposed from non-trauma exposed suicide death. Such findings suggest unique biological backgrounds and may refine identification and treatment of this high-risk group.

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Understanding response to treatment in depression: Insights from the Pakistani DIVERGE study

Umar, M.; Hussain, F.; Khizar, B.; Khan, I.; Khan, F.; Cotic, M.; Chan, L.; Hussain, A.; Ali, M. N.; Gill, S. A.; Mustafa, A. B.; Dogar, I. A.; Nizami, A. T.; Haq, M. M. u.; Mufti, K.; Ansari, M. A.; Hussain, M. I.; Choudhary, S. T.; Maqsood, N.; Rasool, G.; Ali, H.; Ilyas, M.; Tariq, M.; Shafiq, S.; Khan, A. A.; Rashid, S.; Ahmad, H.; Bettani, K. U.; Khan, M. K.; Choudhary, A. R.; Mehdi, M.; Shakoor, A.; Mehmood, N.; Mufti, A. A.; Bhatia, M. R.; Ali, M.; Khan, M. A.; Alam, N.; Naqvi, S. Q.-i.-H.; Mughal, N.; Ilyas, N.; Channar, P.; Ijaz, P.; Din, A.; Agha, H.; Channa, S.; Ambreen, S.; Rehman,

2026-04-17 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350625 medRxiv
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BackgroundMajor depressive disorder (MDD), a leading cause of disability worldwide, exhibits substantial heterogeneity in treatment outcomes. Patients who do not respond to standard antidepressant therapy account for the majority of MDDs disease burden. Risk factors have been implicated in treatment response, including genes impacting on how antidepressants are metabolised. Yet, despite its clinical importance, risk factors for treatment-resistant depression (TRD) remain unexplored in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). We used data from the DIVERGE study on MDD to investigate the risk factors of TRD in Pakistan. MethodsDIVERGE is a genetic epidemiological study that recruited adult MDD patients ([&ge;]18 years) between Sep 27,2021 to Jun 30, 2025, from psychiatric care facilities across Pakistan. Detailed phenotypic information was collected by trained interviewers and blood samples taken. Infinium Global Diversity Array with Enhanced PGx-8 from Illumina was used for genotyping followed by DRAGEN calling to infer metaboliser phenotypes for Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzyme genes. We defined TRD as minimal to no improvement after [&ge;]12 weeks of adherent antidepressant therapy. We conducted multi-level logistic regression to test the association of demographic, clinical and pharmacogenetic variables with TRD. FindingsAmong 3,677 eligible patients, polypharmacy was rampant; 86% were prescribed another psychotropic drug along with an antidepressant. Psychological therapies were uncommon (6%) while 49% of patients had previously visited to a religious leader/faith healer in relation to their mental health problems. TRD was experienced by 34% (95%CI: 32-36%) patients. The TRD group was characterised by more psychotic symptoms and suicidal behaviour (OR=1.39, 95%CI=1.04-1.84, p=0.02; OR=1.03, 95%CI=1.01-1.05, p=0.005). Social support (OR=0.55, 95%CI=0.44-0.69, p=1.4x10-7) and parents being first cousins (OR=0.81, 95%CI=0.69-0.96, p=0.01) were associated with lower odds of TRD. In 1,085 patients with CYP enzyme data, poor (OR=1.85, 95%CI=1.11-3.07, p=0.01) and ultra-rapid (OR=3.11, 95%CI=1.59-6.12, p=0.0009) metabolizers for CYP2C19 had increased risk of TRD compared with normal metabolisers. InterpretationThere was an excessive use of polypharmacy in the treatment of depression while psychological therapies were uncommon highlighting the need for more evidence-based practice. This first large study of MDD from Pakistan uncovered the importance of culture-specific forms of social support in preventing TRD, highlighting opportunities for interventions in low-income settings. Pharmacogenetic markers can be leveraged to predict TRD.

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Time to Discharge and Associated Factors Among Preterm Neonates Admitted to Kiwoko Hospital, Nakaseke District, Uganda: A Competing Risks Analysis

Mutibwa, S.; Wandiembe, S.; Mbonye, K.; Nsimbe, D.

2026-04-15 pediatrics 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350793 medRxiv
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Background: Preterm births contribute to approximately 35% of neonatal deaths globally, with an estimated 13.4 million infants born prematurely each year. Despite this substantial burden, limited evidence exists on time to discharge and its determinants among preterm neonates admitted to Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs), particularly in rural Ugandan settings. This study aimed to investigate time to discharge and associated factors among preterm neonates admitted to Kiwoko Hospital in Nakaseke District, Uganda. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted using secondary data from Kiwoko Hospital on preterm neonates admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) between 2020 and 2021 (n = 847). The cumulative incidence function was used to estimate the probability of discharge within 28 days of admission, accounting for competing events. A Fine and Gray sub-distribution hazard regression model was fitted to identify factors associated with time to discharge. Results: Of the 847 preterm admissions, 70.1% were discharged alive within 28 days. The median time to discharge was 14 days. The cumulative incidence of discharge by 28 days was 68%, accounting for competing events. During follow-up, 165 neonates did not complete the 28-day period, including 88 deaths. Factors significantly associated with time to discharge included place of delivery (SHR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.53-0.73; p<0.001), maternal residence in other districts (SHR: 0.69; 95% CI: 0.48-0.99; p=0.044), extreme preterm (SHR: 0.05; 95% CI: 0.03-0.09; p<0.001), very preterm (SHR: 0.18; 95% CI: 0.14-0.25; p<0.001), moderate preterm (SHR: 0.59; 95% CI: 0.46-0.76; p<0.001), triplet births (SHR: 0.40; 95% CI: 0.23-0.68; p=0.001), 2-4 ANC visits (SHR: 0.70; 95% CI: 0.56-0.87; p=0.002), <=1 ANC visit (SHR: 0.64; 95% CI: 0.49-0.85; p=0.002), respiratory distress syndrome (SHR: 0.64; 95% CI: 0.48-0.74; p<0.001), and birth trauma (SHR: 2.62; 95% CI: 1.60-4.29; p<0.001). Conclusions: Respiratory distress syndrome, fewer antenatal care visits, out-of-district residence, and higher degrees of prematurity were associated with prolonged time to discharge among preterm neonates. Strengthening antenatal care utilization and improving access to quality neonatal care in underserved areas may enhance discharge outcomes.

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Triage Administration of Ondansetron for Gastroenteritis in children; a randomized controlled trial

Weill, O.; Lucas, N.; Bailey, B.; Marquis, C.; Gravel, J.

2026-04-15 pediatrics 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350796 medRxiv
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Objectives: Acute gastroenteritis is a leading cause of pediatric emergency department (ED) visits. While ondansetron reduces vomiting, intravenous rehydration, and hospital admissions, its efficacy when initiated at triage remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate whether triage nurse-initiated administration of ondansetron in children with suspected gastroenteritis reduces the proportion of patients requiring observation following initial physician assessment. Methods: We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in a tertiary pediatric ED in Canada. Children aged 6 months to 17 years presenting with morae than 3 episodes of vomiting in the preceding 24 hours (including 1 within 2 hours of arrival), were eligible. At triage, we randomized participants to receive liquid ondansetron or a color- and taste-matched placebo. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients requiring observation after the first physician evaluation. Secondary outcomes included post-intervention vomiting, ED length of stay, patient comfort, and 48-hour return visits. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03052361). Results: Recruitment was stopped prematurely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Ninety-one participants were randomized to ondansetron (n= 44) or placebo (n= 47). Overall, 40 patients (45%) were discharged immediately after the initial physician assessment, with no difference between the ondansetron and placebo groups (44% vs. 45%; absolute difference -1%, 95% CI: -20% to 19%). No significant differences were observed in all secondary outcomes. Conclusion: In this trial, triage nurse-initiated ondansetron administration did not reduce the need for ED observation in children with presumed gastroenteritis. While being underpowered, this study could inform researchers planning larger clinical trials.

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Characteristics of individuals with cerebral palsy across the United States

Aravamuthan, B. R.; Bailes, A. F.; Baird, M.; Bjornson, K.; Bowen, I.; Bowman, A.; Boyer, E.; Gelineau-Morel, R.; Glader, L.; Gross, P.; Hall, S.; Hurvitz, E.; Kruer, M. C.; Larrew, T.; Marupudi, N.; McPhee, P.; Nichols, S.; Noritz, G.; Oleszek, J.; Ramsey, J.; Raskin, J.; Riordan, H.; Rocque, B.; Shah, M.; Shore, B.; Shrader, M. W.; Spence, D.; Stevenson, C.; Thomas, S. P.; Trost, J.; Wisniewski, S.

2026-04-16 pediatrics 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350870 medRxiv
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Objective Cerebral palsy (CP) affects approximately 1 million Americans and 18 million individuals worldwide, yet contemporary US epidemiologic data remains limited. We aimed to use Cerebral Palsy Research Network (CPRN) clinical registry to describe demographics and clinical characteristics of individuals with CP across the US and determine associations with gross motor function and genetic etiology. Methods Registry subjects were included if they had clinician-confirmed CP and prospectively entered data for Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) Level, gestational age, genetic etiology, CP distribution, and tone/movement types. Logistic regression was used to determine which of these variables plus race, sex, ethnicity, and age were associated with GMFCS level and genetic etiology. Results A total of 9,756 children and adults with CP from 22 CPRN sites met inclusion criteria. Participants were predominantly White (73.0%), male (57.3%), non-Hispanic (87.8%), and younger than 18 years (73.7%). Most were classified as GMFCS levels I-III (55.6%), born preterm (52.8%), had spasticity (83.8%), and had quadriplegia (41.9%); 12.2% were identified as having a genetic etiology. Tone/movement types, CP distribution, and gestational age were significantly associated with both GMFCS level and genetic etiology (p<0.001). Compared to White individuals, Black individuals were more likely to have greater gross motor impairment (p<0.001). Conclusion In this large US cohort, clinical and demographic factors, including race, were associated with gross motor function and genetic etiology in CP. These findings highlight persistent disparities and demonstrate the value of a national clinical registry for informing prognostication, quality improvement efforts, and targeted genetic testing strategies.

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Evaluating Large Language Models for Transparent Quality-of-Care Measurement in Children with ADHD

Bannett, Y.; Pillai, M.; Huang, T.; Luo, I.; Gunturkun, F.; Hernandez-Boussard, T.

2026-04-17 pediatrics 10.64898/2026.04.12.26350732 medRxiv
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ImportanceGuideline-concordant care for young children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) includes recommending parent training in behavior management (PTBM) as first-line treatment. However, assessing guideline adherence through manual chart review is time-consuming and costly, limiting scalable and timely quality-of-care measurement. ObjectiveTo evaluate the accuracy and explainability of large language models (LLMs) in identifying PTBM recommendations in pediatric electronic health record (EHR) notes as a scalable alternative to manual chart review. Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis retrospective cohort study was conducted in a community-based pediatric healthcare network in California consisting of 27 primary care clinics. The study cohort included children aged 4-6 years with [&ge;] 2 primary care visits between 2020-2024 and ICD-10 diagnoses of ADHD or ADHD symptoms (n=542 patients). Clinical notes from the first ADHD-related visit were included. A stratified subset of 122 notes, including all cases with model disagreement, was manually annotated to assess model performance in identifying PTBM recommendations and rank model explanations. ExposuresAssessment and plan sections of clinical notes were analyzed using three generative large language models (Claude-3.5, GPT-4o, and LLaMA-3.3-70B) to identify the presence of PTBM recommendations and generate explanatory rationales and documentation evidence. Main Outcomes and MeasuresModel performance in identifying PTBM recommendations (measured by sensitivity, positive predictive value (PPV), and F1-score) and qualitative explainability ratings of model-generated rationales (based on the QUEST framework). ResultsAll three models demonstrated high performance compared to expert chart review. Claude-3.5 showed balanced performance (sensitivity=0.89, PPV=0.95, and F1-score=0.92) and ranked highest in explainability. LLaMA3.3-70B achieved sensitivity=0.91, PPV=0.89, and F1-score=0.90, ranking second for explainability. GPT-4o had the highest PPV [0.97] but lowest sensitivity [0.82], with an F1-score of 0.89 and the lowest explainability ranking. Based on classifications from the best-performing model, Claude-3.5, 26.4% (143/542) of patients had documented PTBM recommendations at their first ADHD-related visit. Conclusions and RelevanceLLMs can accurately extract guideline-concordant clinician recommendations for non-pharmacological ADHD treatment from unstructured clinical notes while providing clear explanations and supporting evidence. Evaluating model explainability as part of LLM implementation for medical chart review tasks can promote transparent and scalable solutions for quality-of-care measurement.

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Strategies to enroll and retain low-income adolescent and young adult pregnant women in longitudinal studies: lessons learned from the AMOR project

Camara, S. M. A.; de Souza Barbosa, J. F.; Hipp, S.; Fernandes Macedo, S. G. G.; Sentell, T.; Bassani, D. G.; Domingues, M. R.; Pirkle, C. M.

2026-04-17 public and global health 10.64898/2026.04.13.26350540 medRxiv
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BackgroundProspective studies of pregnant adolescents are essencial to effectively address this global health priority. They help answer vital questions about their health, but such studies are uncommon due to the difficulty in retaining adolescents. This paper describes the successes and challenges of the research strategies used to ensure sufficient recruitment and retention of pregnant adolescents in a longitudinal study about adolescent childbearing in an under-resourced setting. MethodsThe Adolescence and Motherhood Research project was conducted in a rural region of Northeast Brazil in 2017-2019 and assessed 50 primigravids between 13-18 years (adolescents) and 50 primigravids between 23-28 years (young adults) during the first 16 weeks of pregnancy with two follow-ups (third trimester of pregnancy, and 4-6 weeks postpartum). Recruitment strategies involved engagement of health sector and community, as well as referrals from health care professionals and dissemination of the project in different locations. Retention strategies included maintaining contact with the participants between assessments and providing transportation for them to attend the follow-up procedures. ResultsRecruitment took 10 months to complete. A total of 78% of the participants were recruited from the primary health care units, mainly after referral from a health care provider. Retention reached 95% of the sample throughout the study (90%: adolescents; 98%: adults). ConclusionA combination of approaches is necessary to successfully recruit and retain youth in longitudinal studies and engaging local stakeholders may help to increase community-perceived legitimacy of the research. Working closely with front-line staff is essential when conducting research in rural low-income communities.

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Risk factors, outcomes, and predictors of therapeutic response in preterm infants with patent ductus arteriosus: A retrospective cohort study

Hamida, H. B.; El Ouaer, M.; Abdelmoula, S.; El Ghali, M.; Bizid, M.; Chamtouri, I.; Monastiri, K.

2026-04-17 pediatrics 10.64898/2026.04.10.26350668 medRxiv
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BackgroundPatent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a common and potentially serious cardiovascular condition in preterm infants, particularly those with low gestational age and birth weight. Its management remains controversial due to variability in screening, diagnostic criteria, and treatment strategies. This study aimed to evaluate risk factors, outcomes, and management strategies for PDA in preterm infants, and to identify predictors of clinical and echocardiographic response to therapy. MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study over a 4-year period (2016-2019) in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of a tertiary care center. All consecutive preterm infants admitted during the study period were eligible. Infants with echocardiographically confirmed PDA who received pharmacological treatment with intravenous paracetamol or ibuprofen were included in the analysis. Missing data were minimal and handled using available-case analysis. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, Pearsons chi-square test, and multivariable logistic regression. ResultsAmong 2154 preterm infants admitted to the NICU, 60 were diagnosed with PDA (incidence : 2.8%). The mean gestational age was 29 {+/-} 2.6 weeks, and the median birth weight was 1200 g. Respiratory distress occurred in 95% of cases, mainly due to hyaline membrane disease (86.7%). PDA was symptomatic in 80% of infants. First-line treatment resulted in clinical improvement in 77% and ductal closure in 83.3% of cases, most within 3 days. Predictors of successful closure included gestational age [&ge;] 28 weeks (OR = 5.9; 95% CI : 1.7-20.2) and antenatal corticosteroid exposure (OR = 1.2; 95% CI : 1.0-1.6). Overall mortality was 35% and was significantly higher in infants < 28 weeks (OR = 5.0; 95% CI : 2.4-10.3). Clinical improvement (OR = 3.7) and echocardiographic closure (OR = 4.5) after first-line treatment were associated with reduced mortality. ConclusionsPDA in preterm infants is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality, particularly in those born before 28 weeks of gestation. Early diagnosis, antenatal corticosteroid exposure, and timely pharmacological treatment may improve outcomes. Systematic echocardiographic screening in high-risk neonates should be considered.

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LRRK2 mutations block NCOA4 trafficking upon iron overload leading to ferroptotic death

Goldman, A.; Nguyen, M.; Lanoix, J.; Li, C.; Fahmy, A.; Zhong Xu, Y.; Schurr, E.; Thibault, P.; Desjardins, M.; McBride, H.

2026-04-17 cell biology 10.1101/2025.08.25.672135 medRxiv
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Altered iron homeostasis has long been implicated in Parkinson's Disease (PD), although the mechanisms have not been clear. Given the critical role of PD-related activating mutations in LRRK2 (leucine-rich repeat protein kinase 2) within membrane trafficking pathways we examined the impact of a homozygous mutant LRRK2G2019S on iron homeostasis within the RAW macrophage cell line with high iron capacity. Proteomics analysis revealed a dysregulation of iron-related proteins in steady state with highly elevated levels of ferritin light chain and a reduction of ferritin heavy chain. LRRK2G2019S mutant cells showed efficient ferritinophagy upon iron chelation, but upon iron overload there was a near complete block in the degradation of the ferritinophagy adaptor NCOA4. These conditions lead to an accumulation of phosphorylated Rab8 at the plasma membrane, which is selectively inhibited by LRRK type II kinase inhibitors. Iron overload then leads to increased oxidative stress and ferroptotic cell death. These data implicate LRRK2 as a key regulator of iron homeostasis and point to the need for an increased focus on the mechanisms of iron dysregulation in PD.