Should we consider integrated approach for endometriosis-associated infertility as gold standard management? Rationale and results from a large cohort analysis

2017 ◽  
Vol 297 (3) ◽  
pp. 613-621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vesna Šalamun ◽  
Ivan Verdenik ◽  
Antonio Simone Laganà ◽  
Eda Vrtačnik-Bokal
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 2473011420S0040
Author(s):  
Ryan G. Rogero ◽  
Emmanuel M. Illical ◽  
Daniel Corr ◽  
Steven M. Raikin ◽  
James Krieg ◽  
...  

Category: Ankle; Trauma Introduction/Purpose: With an increasing frequency of syndesmotic fixation during ankle fracture ORIF and no current gold standard management protocol, it is important for surgeons to understand the frequency and usage patterns of the various techniques among other orthopaedic surgeons. The purposes of this study are to determine how orthopaedic surgeons currently manage ankle fractures with concomitant syndesmotic disruption and to identify surgeon demographics predictive of syndesmotic management. Methods: An 18-question survey, including 10 specific syndesmotic management questions was sent to the Orthopaedic Trauma Association (OTA) and Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA), as well as sent to email addresses of foot and ankle-fellowship trained surgeons. Surgeon demographic questions included years, country, and type of practice, fellowship(s) completed, setting of ankle fracture surgery, and number of ankle fractures operated on per year. Multinomial regression analysis was performed to determine if surgeon demographics were predictive of syndesmotic management. Results: One-hundred ten orthopaedic surgeons completed our survey. Selected predictors of syndesmotic management included: private practice with academic appointments (0.077 [0.007, 0.834]; p=0.035) being predictive of not using screws through an ORIF plate; foot & ankle fellowship (9.981 [1.787, 55.764]; p=0.009) and trauma fellowship (6.644 [1.302, 33.916]; p=0.023) predictive of utilizing screws through a plate; no fellowship (14.886 [1.226, 180.695]; p=0.034) predictive of only using 1 screw; and surgeons practicing in the U.S. were more likely to not use screws across just 3 cortices (0.031 [0.810, 3.660]; p=0.009). Additionally, among those utilizing suture-button devices, foot & ankle fellowship-trained surgeons were more likely to implement suture-button through plate (7.676 [1.286, 45.806]; p=0.025). Conclusion: Several surgeon factors influence decision making in the management of ankle fractures with syndesmotic disruption. This study raises awareness of differences in management strategies that should be used for further discussion when determining a potential gold standard for management of these complex injuries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 1111-1115
Author(s):  
Shmuel Goldberg ◽  
Avital Stein ◽  
Elie Picard ◽  
Leon Joseph ◽  
Ron Kedem ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4670-4670
Author(s):  
Giovanni Carulli ◽  
Sara Galimberti ◽  
Giuseppina Bianchi ◽  
Alessandra Zucca ◽  
Enrico Orciuolo ◽  
...  

Abstract Bone marrow biopsy, (BMB) is essential to detect bone marrow (BM) infiltration in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs). Flow cytometry (FC) and PCR for clonal IgH rearrangement are considered as ancillary methods, but there is increasing evidence for their clinical usefulness. Observations dealing with combined use of the three methods still are lacking. Thus we carried out a retrospective study about the usefulness of an integrated approach to detect BM infiltration in NHLs. 193 patients suffering from NHLs (79 at presentation, 114 after chemotherapy alone or with: Rituximab, Campath-1, autologous BM transplantation), who had undergone simultaneous execution of BMB, and FC, and PCR from the myeloaspirate on the same iliac crest, were evaluated. BMB was carried out according to standard methods (infiltration pattern and immunohistochemistry). FC was performed using three-color staining, including CD45, to identify: κ/λ ratio, specific phenotype for CLL, MCL and HCL. PCR included identification of IgH rearrangement (CDR3 and VH families), BCL-1/JH translocation for MCL and BCL-2/JH translocation for follicular lymphoma. BMB, FC and PCR agreed in 142 cases and showed infiltration in 74 and lack of infiltration in 68. Cases at presentation were characterized by higher percentages of concordance than cases during the post-chemotherapy (84,8% vs 65.6%). Discrepant results were obtained in 51 cases (26.4%), 13 at presentation and 38 after treatment. In 17 specimens (8.8% of all cases, 33.3% of discordant cases), BM infiltration was detected only by PCR. In 12 of these samples (3 untreated and 14 treated) small B-cell percentages (0.50 ± 0.72, mean ± SD; range 0.02–3.00%) were present at FC. The remaining 5 cases (2.6%) were characterized by a lack of surface Ig expression and absence of specific phenotype: BMB was negative but IgH was clonal. 2 other cases with lack of surface Ig expression (for 7 cases in total, 3.6%), BMB-/PCR- were identified. Conversely, in 10 samples (5.2% of all cases, 19.6% of discordant specimens) PCR failed to detect BM infiltration, which was demonstrated by both FC and BMB. These specimens were characterized by high B-cell percentages (7 ± 8.25, mean ± SD; range 0.3–26.0%) and were obtained from 5 untreated and 5 treated patients. The remaining discordant cases were: 7 treated cases with BMB+/PCR+ and FC-; 6 cases (3 treated and 3 untreated) with FC+ and BMB-/PCR-; 3 treated cases with BMB- and FC+/PCR+; 3 cases (1 untreated and 2 treated) with BMB+ and FC-/PCR-. In the 3 treated cases with lack of amplification by PCR, the following results were observed: FC+/BMB+ in 1 case; FC-/BMB- in the remaining 2. Our data show that no single method is able to identify all cases of BM involvement in NHLs. BMB is actually considered the gold standard, however the combination of the three assays can increase the yields of detection of minimal residual disease. In fact, considering the three assays together as gold standard, BMB alone has a sensibility of 82.1%, a specificity of 96,3%, with 1.6% of false positive but 10.4% of false negative. The PCR can increase the sensibility and FC can than be considered as a valid confirmation assay, able to solve the cases when BMB and PCR show discrepancy. To conclude, the three assays are necessary to evaluate BM infiltration in NHLs, because BMB alone underestimate the BM involvement, especially following treatment.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 21-21
Author(s):  
Elena Elimova ◽  
Xuemei Wang ◽  
Wei Qiao ◽  
Kazuki Sudo ◽  
Roopma Wadhwa ◽  
...  

21 Background: The goal of surveillance after local therapy (trimodality or bimodality) is to salvage patients with actionable LRF, however, the benefits of current surveillance strategies are not well documented. We report on a large cohort of LEC patients with actionable LRF. Methods: Between 2000 and 2013, 127 patients with actionable LRF were assessed. Histologic/cytologic confirmation of LRF was the gold standard. All surveillance tools (imaging and endoscopy) were assessed. Results: The majority of the patients were men (89%), had adenocarcinoma (79%), had their LRF identified through surveillance (85%) and most had no new symptoms (72%). For the 41 LRFs after trimodality, the sensitivity of PET/CT alone was 93% but the specificity was 67%. In trimodality patients with a positive PET/CT for LRF, only 44% had LRF confirmed by endoscopy and 56% LRFs confirm by additional testing (e.g., FNA, etc). Alternatively, in bimodality patients, endoscopy confirmed LRF in 81% (n=85; 1 patient not evaluable). Trimodality patients were at higher risk of subsequent (e.g., distant) relapse after LRF was documented than were bimodality patients (p=0.03); 78% of the relapses were distant. In bimodality patients, 99% of relapses (LRF and/or distant) occurred within 36 months of therapy while in trimodality patients, 90% of relapses occurred within 36 months of surgery. Conclusions: Our data suggest that PET/CT is more likely to detect LRFs than endoscopy in trimodality patients. However, in bimodality patients, endoscopy is more valuable than PET/CT for documenting LRFs. At least 3 years of surveillance are needed for all LEC patients. However, even after the salvage, distant relapses are common. From U. T. M. D. Anderson Cancer Center (UTMDACC), Houston, Texas, USA. (Supported in part by UTMDACC, and CA 138671 and CA172741 from the NCI).


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (6_suppl) ◽  
pp. 743-743
Author(s):  
Ritesh Kotecha ◽  
Erika Gedvilaite ◽  
Samuel J. Murray ◽  
Ashley Foster ◽  
Robert J. Motzer ◽  
...  

743 Background: Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) profiling is a non-invasive method to genomically assess solid tumors. Key benchmarks are required to assess applications in RCC management. To evaluate this tool broadly, we performed a large cohort analysis using a comparative approach to correlate clinical characteristics and matched oncogenomics of primary tumor and ctDNA. Methods: Pts with prior NGS sequenced mutational profiles from tumor (nephrectomy or metastatic tissues) underwent a single-time point plasma collection for ctDNA extraction. ctDNA targeted NGS sequencing was performed using MSK-IMPACT, with bi-directional cross genotype comparison using Waltz 2.0. Liberal (1-2 reads) and stringent (≥3 reads) filters were applied, with a cut-off of <30% allele frequency to remove germline alterations. Relevant clinical parameters were analyzed for correlation with ctDNA alteration frequency and load. Results: 110 metastatic clear-cell RCC pts, of whom available IMDC-risk was favorable (25%), intermediate (45%), or poor (4%) were included. 96% of pts had a nephrectomy prior to ctDNA collection, and most were heavily pre-treated (mean: 3 therapies, R: 0-8). The median time from diagnosis to ctDNA collection was 22.1 months (R: 2.3-215), and the median time from site specific tissue sequencing was 23.8 months (R: 1-177). 587 alterations were identified across the entire cohort in primary tissues, and 65% of pts had ≥1 alteration in ctDNA by liberal criteria. Detection rates for VHL and PBRM1 alterations were different in primary tissue and ctDNA (both liberal and stringent) with VHL altered in 92%, 43% and 50%, respectively; and PBRM1 altered in 50%, 25%, 21%, respectively. Conclusions: This large cohort analysis shows comparable mutational profiles of RCC-specific alterations in primary tissue and ctDNA, and highlights challenges of liquid biopsy approaches in RCC. Future efforts to correlate clinical outcomes with algorithm-based metrics will enhance the utility of this tool.[Table: see text]


2015 ◽  
Vol 148 (4) ◽  
pp. S-250-S-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony de Buck van Overstraeten ◽  
Emma J. Eshuis ◽  
Severine Vermeire ◽  
Gert A. Van Assche ◽  
Marc Ferrante ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shmuel Goldberg ◽  
Elie Picard ◽  
Leon Joseph ◽  
Ron Kedem ◽  
Adir Sommer ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcella Schiavone ◽  
Damiano Pizzol ◽  
Anna Claudia Colangelo ◽  
Mario Antunes

Abstract Cantrell syndrome (CS) is defined as congenital combination of five anomalies: defects at the lower part of the sternum, anterior diaphragm, midline supraumbilical abdominal wall, diaphragmatic pericardium and ectopia cordis. Antenatal screening should be performed to make an accurate prenatal diagnosis. The prognosis is usually poor with a high mortality early in life. The gold standard management is surgery but its prognosis remains poor. In many low-income settings prenatal examinations and surgery treatment are not possible. In the present case, we report a not surgery managed baby affected by CS, with good clinical conditions after 5 months.


2020 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 104255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucia Taramasso ◽  
Laura Magnasco ◽  
Bianca Bruzzone ◽  
Patrizia Caligiuri ◽  
Giorgio Bozzi ◽  
...  

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