scholarly journals A prospective multicentric observational study to evolve the usefulness of 13 predefined homoeopathic medicines in the management of acute rhinitis in children.

Author(s):  
Chaturbhuja Nayak ◽  
Vikram Singh ◽  
Krishna Singh ◽  
Hari Singh ◽  
Praveen Oberai ◽  
...  

Aims: The study aimed to evaluate the effect of a group of homeopathic medicines in children with acute rhinitis. Materials and methods: In this multi-centric open clinical trial, a total of 784 children (408 males; 384 females) aged 6 months to 15 years, presenting symptoms of acute rhinitis were enrolled from 7 Institutes/ Units under the Central Council for Research in Homeopathy (India). Symptoms were assessed using an acute rhinitis symptom score (ARSS). A total of 13 homeopathic medicines were shortlisted after repertorizing the nosological symptoms of acute rhinitis in children and the results were analyzed. The medicines were prescribed in dilution 6c (10-12) and doses were repeated from few minutes to few hours as per the need of the case. Appearance of any change (improvement or worsening) was followed by placebo / change in dilution or change in medicine according to the response of the patient. The follow up period was up to the 7th day of illness. Results: Out of 784 children enrolled, 638 children were followed up and analyzed. A significant change in the score from the baseline (p

Homeopathy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lex Rutten ◽  
José Eizayaga ◽  
Harleen Kaur ◽  
Chetna Deep Lamba ◽  
Jyoti Sachdeva ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Polar symptoms (PS)—symptoms with opposite values—are frequently used in homeopathy, but have many misleading entries in the repertory. This is caused by using absolute occurrence of symptoms, causing the same medicine to appear in both (opposite) symptom rubrics, and by lack of comparison with other medicines. Some PS, like ‘aversion/desire for sweets’ have a frequency distribution that is not evenly distributed around the neutral value: a desire for sweets is much more common than aversion. A desire for sweets is an indication for a specific medicine only if this desire occurs more frequently in this specific medicine population than in the remainder of the population. We need to find the best way to represent this difference. Methods A multi-centre, explorative, prospective, observational study was conducted by nine centres of the Central Council for Research in Homoeopathy. Two-hundred and sixteen patients were enrolled with chronic cough lasting more than 8 weeks, and received usual homeopathic care. During intake, 30 general PS, 27 polar cough symptoms and 3 non-polar cough symptoms were checked. Different ways of representing results were explored, including two quantities borrowed from mechanics: Centre of Mass (CoM) and Leverage. Results At the fourth follow-up, three medicines with more than 10 cases with good results were identified: 20 Phosphorus, 19 Pulsatilla and 13 Sulphur. The mean value of the frequency distribution of some symptoms in the whole sample was considerably different from the neutral value. Comparing a medicine population with the remainder of the respective population can give results that differ from polarity analysis. For some symptoms, the ‘distance’ (Leverage) between the CoMs of the medicine population and the remainder of the population was clearer than the likelihood ratio (LR). Conclusion If the LR value is not clear about the prognostic value in PS, notions from mechanics such as CoM and Leverage can clarify how to interpret a polar symptom.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1845-1845
Author(s):  
Lydia Roy ◽  
Jean Christophe Ianotto ◽  
Joelle Guilhot ◽  
Christian Récher ◽  
Laurence Legros ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Therapeutic guidelines in essential thrombocytemia (ET) are based on established criteria, ie. age more than 60 years, history of thrombosis, platelets more than 1000-1500 ×109/L and to lesser degree cardio-vascular risk factors. Hydroxyurea and anagrelide are the most commonly used cytoreductive therapy for high risk ET. Despite a proven activity in Ph negative myeloproliferative disorders, generalized use and efficacy of Interferon-alpha (IFN-α) have been hampered by frequent side effects. Nonetheless it is a non leukemogenic therapeutic option for younger patients (pts) and during pregnancy. Two phase II trials using Pegylated (Peg) forms of IFN-α in pts with polycythemia vera (PV) or high risk ET have provided interesting results: i) an improved toxicity profile generally associated with a rapid hematolologic response, ii) a molecular response described in a subset of JAK2V617F positive PV or ET pts treated with PegIFN-α. Aim: To estimate the rationale of PegIFN-α therapy selection in high risk ET patients, efficacy and tolerance. Methods:Cases of high risk ET patients, who started PegIFN-α therapy between 2006 and 2011, were reported by centres of the French Intergroup of Myeloproliferative disorders and included in an observational study. We collected information regarding history of MPN, treatment, hematologic response at different timepoints, toxicities related to PegIFN-α, thrombo-hemorrhagic events and hematologic progression. The current analysis was performed on 103 consecutive pts. Results: Median follow-up from ET diagnosis was 9 years (3-27). 74% of pts were female, median age was 37 years (range 16-67). Previous vascular event was observed in 36% of cases and JAK2V617F mutation was detected in 52% of pts. . Median time from diagnosis to PegIFN-α was 40 months (1-255). PegIFN-α was administered after hydroxyurea and anagrelide in second or third line (56% and 27% respectively). No prior therapy has been used for 16% of pts. Reasons for starting PegIFN-α were lack of hematologic response (21%), toxicity to prior therapies (17%), pregnancy (15%), or medical decision for younger pts (47%). Pts received either PegIFNα-2a (n=91) or PegIFNα-2b (n=12), based on physician decision. According to the 2009 European LeukemiaNet criteria and with a median exposure to PegIFN-α of 29 months (1-92), 81% of pts achieved a complete hematologic response (CHR). Cumulative incidence of CHR were 58 % (95% CI: 49-68), 73% (95% CI: 65-81) and 80% (95% CI: 71-87) at 6, 12 and 24 months respectively. By analysing the response according to JAK2 status, cumulative incidence of CHR was better for the JAK2V617F positive subgroup (p=0.0183, overall). At 36 months estimated CHR rates were 89% (95% CI: 79-95) and 70% (95% CI: 57-82) for JAK2VF positive vs negative subgroup respectively. Median exposure to PegIFN-α was 29 months in both groups. At last follow-up, with a median of 42 months since PegIFN-α initiation, 53% of the pts were still treated with PegIFN-α. Among them, 76% have maintained a CHR. Reasons for discontinuation of PegIFN-α (47% of pts) were consecutive to PegIFN-α toxicity (59%), -mainly chronic moderate non hematologic toxicity-, or hematologic responses were considered insufficient in16%. In addition, PegIFN-α has been stopped in a subset of pts who achieved a durable stable CHR. In Conclusion, This study provides results of PegIFN-α therapy in a cohort of high risk ET pts not included in clinical trials. In this selected population of young pts, a durable efficacy of therapy was observed in half of patients. Characteristics of hematologic response according to molecular status will be presented. These results support the PegIFN-α as an alternative therapy to hydroxyurea and anagrelide in high risk ET, and warrant its investigation in further prospective randomized studies. Disclosures Roy: Merck: Peg-Interferon provided for academic clinical trial in CML Other. Off Label Use: Peg-Interferon in essential thrombocythemia. Gyan:Roche: Research Funding. Nicolini:BMS: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Ariad: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau. Kiladjian:Roche: Peg-Interferon provided for academic clinical trial in PV Other.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (6_suppl) ◽  
pp. 53-53
Author(s):  
Daniel M. Geynisman ◽  
Andres F Correa ◽  
Chethan Ramamurthy ◽  
J Robert Beck ◽  
Elizabeth A. Handorf

53 Background: Multiple phase III trials have proven that Abi and Doc both improve overall survival (OS) in men with mHSPC. No randomized trials have compared the two approaches. Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational study to compare OS in de novo M1 men, treated with Abi vs. Doc using patient-level data from the Flatiron health EHR-derived de-identified database. We also compared this real-world OS to trial level data using extracted data points along the OS curves from CHAARTED and LATITUDE trials. OS was compared via Kaplan-Meier curves. Analyses were adjusted via propensity score weighting for age, Gleason score, PSA at diagnosis, race, ethnicity, ECOG PS, insurance type and treatment setting. Results: The cohort included 418 Abi pts and 807 Doc pts (Table). Median follow-up was 13.5 mo for Abi and 31.6 mo for Doc. Unadjusted median OS for Abi and Doc were 31.6 mo (95% CI 28.1-NA) and 41.8 mo (95% CI 37.4-46.3) respectively (P=0.09). Twelve mo and 24 mo OS for Abi was 86.3% and 69%; for Doc it was 89.8% and 72.1 %. Median adjusted OS for Abi and Doc were 31.6 mo (95% CI 28.0-undefined) and 38.8 mo (95% CI 33.1-46.3) respectively (P=0.4). Twelve mo and 24 mo adjusted OS for Abi was 86.6% and 69.4%; for Doc it was 87.9% and 69.2%. Based on extracted trial data, in LATITUDE, Abi treated pts had 12 mo and 24 mo OS of 93.5% and 77.0%; in CHAARTED, Doc treated pts had 12 mo and 24 mo OS of 94.3% and 83.6%. Conclusions: Utilizing real-world data, we demonstrate that 12 and 24-months OS are clinically and statistically similar between Abi and Doc in men with mHSPC. Median OS is also similar, although due to limited follow-up, the estimate of median OS for Abi has large variability. In addition, we show that clinical trial pts had superior outcomes to those in a real-world clinic population. Recent meta-analyses of trial data have not found significant differences in OS for Abi vs. Doc; this analysis of real-world data confirms these findings and indicates that they may be generalizable to a broader patient population. Although this observational study is subject to residual confounding and missing data, it provides further evidence to support the use of both Abi and Doc in men with mHSPC. Differentiating costs, side-effects and QOL can thus become more prominent when making decisions about therapy. [Table: see text]


2021 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Saurabh Srivastava ◽  
Anand Pandey ◽  
Piyush Kumar ◽  
Survesh K. Gupta ◽  
Sudhir Singh ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Labial adhesion is the fusion of the labia minora or majora. The literature reports conservative management. However, the situation may be different in our setup, where management differs due to prevailing circumstances. The present study was conducted to evaluate labial adhesion presentation, management, and outcome in our center. Methods It was a retrospective observational study from January 2015 to January 2020. The patients were evaluated for age at presentation, presenting symptoms, type of adhesions, treatment, recurrence, and follow-up. The treatment included the manual release of labial adhesion and Mupirocin ointment application for 15 days. They were advised to attend the outpatient department after 1 month for evaluation and later on in case of any problem. Results The total number of patients was 150, of which 104 (69.33%) were from rural backgrounds. The complaint was of the absent vaginal opening in all patients. Seventeen (11.33%) were advised ultrasonography of the abdomen elsewhere to look for the presence of internal genital organs. The local examination revealed poor hygiene in 65 (43.33%) patients. The patient with thick adhesions has minor erythema after the release of adhesions. Ten (6.66%) patients had a recurrence managed by repeat release with no recurrence. Conclusion Despite being a benign entity, labial adhesion may be a cause of severe concern. Manual separation and antibiotic ointment may be a viable first option in its management with minimal recurrence. Maintenance of local hygiene may be needed to prevent a recurrence. The overall outcome is excellent.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-228
Author(s):  
Eliza B. Szymanek ◽  
Erin M. Miller ◽  
Amy N. Weart ◽  
Jamie B. Morris ◽  
Donald L. Goss

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