The Journal of pathology
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The Journal of pathology · Mar 2011
EditorialThe Journal of Pathology's approach to publication ethics and misconduct.
This Editorial highlights recent changes at The Journal of Pathology intended to improve our ability to detect, and we hope deter, instances of ethical misconduct among submissions made to the Journal, such as cases of guest authorship and plagiarism. We also discuss our experience to date and describe our policies for dealing with such cases. These changes are all encapsulated in our full online Author Guidelines.
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The Journal of pathology · Mar 2011
Effect of fixation on brain and lymphoreticular vCJD prions and bioassay of key positive specimens from a retrospective vCJD prevalence study.
Anonymous screening of lymphoreticular tissues removed during routine surgery has been applied to estimate the UK population prevalence of asymptomatic vCJD prion infection. The retrospective study of Hilton et al (J Pathol 2004; 203: 733-739) found accumulation of abnormal prion protein in three formalin-fixed appendix specimens. This led to an estimated UK prevalence of vCJD infection of ∼1 in 4000, which remains the key evidence supporting current risk reduction measures to reduce iatrogenic transmission of vCJD prions in the UK. ⋯ No prion transmission was observed from either of the FFPE appendix specimens. The absence of detectable infectivity in fixed, known positive vCJD lymphoreticular tissue precludes interpreting negative transmissions from vCJD prevalence study appendix specimens. In this context, the Hilton et al study should continue to inform risk assessment pending the outcome of larger-scale studies on discarded surgical tissues and autopsy samples.