ampullary adenocarcinoma
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

156
(FIVE YEARS 52)

H-INDEX

14
(FIVE YEARS 2)

Medicina ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 57 (11) ◽  
pp. 1238
Author(s):  
Yung-En Tsai ◽  
Ke-Hung Chien ◽  
Yao-Feng Li ◽  
Shiue-Wei Lai

Background: Orbital metastasis from ampullary carcinoma is rare, with no previously reported cases. Case presentation: We report the case of a 60-year-old man who complained of a right-sided headache, blurred vision, progressive proptosis, ptosis, and right eye pain for 3 months. His past medical history included an ampullary adenocarcinoma stage IIIA treated via the Whipple procedure and adjuvant chemoradiotherapy 1 year ago. However, he was lost to follow-up. Computed tomography of the orbit showed a soft tissue lesion in the right orbital fossa measuring 3.3 × 2 × 2 cm. An orbital mass biopsy demonstrated an intestinal-type adenocarcinoma that tested positive for cytokeratins 7 and 20 and CDX2 on immunohistochemical staining. The pathologic diagnosis was metastatic adenocarcinoma from the ampulla of Vater. Despite oncological treatment, the patient’s illness progressed. He received palliative treatment and died 1 month later. Conclusions: We presented a rare case of orbital metastasis from ampullary adenocarcinoma. This should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with a history of ampullary adenocarcinoma who present with symptoms referring to the relevant locations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. e00680
Author(s):  
A.V. Pradeep ◽  
Abdul Razik ◽  
Ankur Goyal ◽  
Atin Kumar ◽  
Virinder Kumar Bansal ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel HL Lemmers ◽  
Sara Cherri ◽  
Faridi S. van Etten-Jamaludin ◽  
Silvia Noventa ◽  
Alberto Zaniboni ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 100023
Author(s):  
Paula Muñoz-Muñoz ◽  
Irene Carretero ◽  
Raquel Arranz ◽  
Esther Moreno ◽  
Laura Del Campo-Abendea ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. clincanres.1906.2021
Author(s):  
Saptarshi Chakraborty ◽  
Brett L. Ecker ◽  
Ken Seier ◽  
Victoria G. Aveson ◽  
Vinod P. Balachandran ◽  
...  

DEN Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuma Daiku ◽  
Kenji Ikezawa ◽  
Shingo Maeda ◽  
Yutaro Abe ◽  
Yugo Kai ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15099-e15099
Author(s):  
Eden Romm ◽  
Emiliya Davtyan ◽  
Kevin Bush ◽  
Ramsay Sutton ◽  
Itamar Patek ◽  
...  

e15099 Background: Oncologists need effective precision medicine tools to navigate the myriad of therapeutic options to best address each patient’s unique tumor profile. Described here is a digital solution, which analyzes tumor data (NGS, other), scores and ranks known and novel matching combinations of cancer drugs with molecular-level precision for decision support. Methods: All data was acquired through the published supplement of the I-PREDICT study (NCT 02534675). Patients with available progression-free survival (PFS) and sequencing data who received <3 matched non-experimental cancer drugs in combination were evaluated (n=77). To determine each patient’s score (represented as %), the system used expert-curated content integrated within an artificial intelligence (AI) reasoning framework that computed how well the therapy each patient received matched their tumor’s genomic profile. The dataset was binarized at 36 possible thresholds, which split the data into higher vs. lower score bins. Relationship with PFS and the degree of separation between bins were evaluated with Kaplan-Meier plots and assessed in terms of p-value, hazard ratios and related confidence intervals (Table). To prevent sampling bias at high and low thresholding extremes of this dataset, a limit was imposed of >25 patients per bin. Results: Significant separation between high and low scoring bins was observed in >73% of evaluable thresholds. The mean p-value was 0.044 (range, 0.011-0.13). The hazard ratio was consistently ̃2 (mean, 1.81, range, 1.50-2.08). A similar level of statistical significance was observed for all thresholds up to and including bracketing of 60% (Table). Despite the small size of this dataset and the disparity between sample counts per bin seen at the end of the range, significant p-values of <0.05 were achieved. Ex., a 68-year-old female with an ampullary adenocarcinoma harboring ERBB2, CDK6 and other alterations, received a combination of pertuzumab and trastuzumab scoring 56%. The PFS was 745+ days. However, had palbociclib, ribociclib, or abemaciclib been added to this combination, the resulting 3-drug options would have scored even higher due to also targeting CDK6. Conclusions: Our study indicates that therapies with higher scores were predictive of better PFS, while lower scores were predictive of worse PFS. The results will be validated on larger datasets but are already demonstrative of the utility of this system in providing digital guidance to oncologists in selecting the most suitable treatment. [Table: see text]


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document