110 research outputs found
Editorial: miRNAs and their role in endocrine cancer progression: from prognosis to treatment
Epidemiology-based evaluation of trends in treatment for ruptured intracranial aneurysms in Italy
Background: In recent years there have been significant advances in the diagnosis, management and treatment of intracranial aneurysms (IAs) in Italy. Changes in prevalence of several epigenetic risk factors in the population as well as in environmental factors may have influenced the epidemiological burden of this disease. No long-term, population-based study about the incidence of treated ruptured IAs (rIAs) in Italy has yet been reported in literature. Methods: A long-term (January 2015 - December 2020), nationwide epidemiology study was performed by using discharge data collected by the Italian National Agency for Regional Healthcare Services with a particular focus on the treatment incidence of rIAs. A sub-analysis per macro-areas (north, center, and south and islands) was also performed, including the data about regional healthcare systems organization. The prevalence of common epigenetic and environmental risk factors has been also assessed. Results: Over 6 years, the mean incidence of rIAs treatment was 2.7 x 100.000 per year (ds ± 0.1; range: 2.6-2.9). In 2020, there was a significant north-south decreasing gradient in incidence (north vs center vs south and islands: 3.4 vs 2.4 vs 1.8 x 100.000/year; all p<0.001). There were no meaningful differences between macro-areas in terms of access to emergency care and number of neurosurgical wards per population. The rate of unruptured IAs (uIAs) treatment did not show a correlation to that of ruptured ones. Minor regional differences were retrieved for high-risk hypertension as well as for alcohol abuse prevalence. Air pollutants and temperature charts showed a north-south gradient similar to that of the incidence in the treated rIAs. Conclusions: The mean incidence of treated rIAs was stable over the 2015-2020 period in Italy. A north-south decreasing gradient in rIAs treatment incidence was reported. Neither the Regional healthcare organizations nor the rate of uIAs treatment were significant factors explaining the regional differences in the incidence of rIAs treatment. Minor differences in epigenetic and environmental risk factors may be synergistically involved
Quantitative Anatomic Comparison of Endoscopic Transnasal and Microsurgical Transcranial Approaches to the Anterior Cranial Fossa
BACKGROUND: Several microsurgical transcranial approaches (MTAs) and endoscopic transnasal approaches (EEAs) to the anterior cranial fossa (ACF) have been described. OBJECTIVE: To provide a preclinical, quantitative, anatomic, comparative analysis of surgical approaches to the ACF. METHODS: Five alcohol-fixed specimens underwent high-resolution computed tomography. The following approaches were performed on each specimen: EEAs (transcribriform, transtuberculum, and transplanum), anterior MTAs (transfrontal sinus interhemispheric, frontobasal interhemispheric, and subfrontal with unilateral and bilateral frontal craniotomy), and anterolateral MTAs (supraorbital, minipterional, pterional, and frontotemporal orbitozygomatic approach). An optic neuronavigation system and dedicated software (ApproachViewer, part of GTx-Eyes II-UHN) were used to quantify the working volume of each approach and extrapolate the exposure of different ACF regions. Mixed linear models with random intercepts were used for statistical analyses. RESULTS: EEAs offer a large and direct route to the midline region of ACF, whose most anterior structures (ie, crista galli, cribriform plate, and ethmoidal roof) are also well exposed by anterior MTAs, whereas deeper ones (ie, planum sphenoidale and tuberculum sellae) are also well exposed by anterolateral MTAs. The orbital roof region is exposed by both anterolateral and lateral MTAs. The posterolateral region (ie, sphenoid wing and optic canal) is well exposed by anterolateral MTAs. CONCLUSION: Anterior and anterolateral MTAs play a pivotal role in the exposure of most anterior and posterolateral ACF regions, respectively, whereas midline regions are well exposed by EEAs. Furthermore, certain anterolateral approaches may be most useful when involvement of the optic canal and nerves involvement are suspected
Effects of pre-operative isolation on postoperative pulmonary complications after elective surgery: an international prospective cohort study
We aimed to determine the impact of pre-operative isolation on postoperative pulmonary complications after elective surgery during the global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. We performed an international prospective cohort study including patients undergoing elective surgery in October 2020. Isolation was defined as the period before surgery during which patients did not leave their house or receive visitors from outside their household. The primary outcome was postoperative pulmonary complications, adjusted in multivariable models for measured confounders. Pre-defined sub-group analyses were performed for the primary outcome. A total of 96,454 patients from 114 countries were included and overall, 26,948 (27.9%) patients isolated before surgery. Postoperative pulmonary complications were recorded in 1947 (2.0%) patients of which 227 (11.7%) were associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Patients who isolated pre-operatively were older, had more respiratory comorbidities and were more commonly from areas of high SARS-CoV-2 incidence and high-income countries. Although the overall rates of postoperative pulmonary complications were similar in those that isolated and those that did not (2.1% vs 2.0%, respectively), isolation was associated with higher rates of postoperative pulmonary complications after adjustment (adjusted OR 1.20, 95%CI 1.05-1.36, p = 0.005). Sensitivity analyses revealed no further differences when patients were categorised by: pre-operative testing; use of COVID-19-free pathways; or community SARS-CoV-2 prevalence. The rate of postoperative pulmonary complications increased with periods of isolation longer than 3 days, with an OR (95%CI) at 4-7 days or >= 8 days of 1.25 (1.04-1.48), p = 0.015 and 1.31 (1.11-1.55), p = 0.001, respectively. Isolation before elective surgery might be associated with a small but clinically important increased risk of postoperative pulmonary complications. Longer periods of isolation showed no reduction in the risk of postoperative pulmonary complications. These findings have significant implications for global provision of elective surgical care
Pituitary carcinoma: a devastating disease in need of an earlier diagnosis and of effective therapies.
BACKGROUND: Pituitary carcinomas are rare and challenging clinical entities.
Because of the paucity of cases, there is limited information in the literature
on how best to diagnose and treat pituitary carcinomas.
METHODS: We review the literature and describe a woman who presented
with an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-secreting pituitary macroadenoma
that later evolved into a carcinoma with intracranial metastases.
RESULTS: A 39-year-old woman presented at age 27 with classic findings of
Cushing’s syndrome and a pituitary macroadenoma. Her initial treatment was
transsphenoidal surgery, during which we confirmed an ACTH-secreting pituitary
neoplasm. For 5 years, she was asymptomatic before her first recurrence. During
the next 6 years, she underwent four transsphenoidal surgeries and two
craniotomies. After each surgery, there was some reduction in the size of the
macroadenoma but the residual tumor mass would rapidly enlarge. Immunochemical
staining was positive for ACTH, and a stain for Ki-67 antigen showed
a high mitotic index. Eleven years after her initial presentation, magnetic
resonance imaging revealed bilateral hippocampal and tempero-occipital
masses. The patient’s health continued to deteriorate, largely from complications
of severe hypercortisolemia, and she died from sepsis. At postmortem, the
hippocampus and tempero-occipital lobe masses proved to be a pituitary tumor
with positive ACTH staining.
CONCLUSIONS: Pituitary carcinomas are rare, may present many years after
diagnosis of a primary pituitary adenoma, and should be suspected in patients with
persistent or recurrent disease. Reliable histopathologic ways to distinguish between
carcinoma and adenoma are difficult because the features of hypercellularity,
nuclear pleomorphism, and mitotic figures are not always helpful.
Key words
Cancer
Corticotroph carcinoma
Cushing syndrome
Metastasis
Pituitary ACTH hypersecretion
Pituitary carcinoma
Pituitary neoplasm
Abbreviations and Acronyms
ACTH: Adrenocorticotropic hormone
CT: Computed tomography
MRI: Magnetic resonance imaging
From the Departments of 1Medicine, Section
of Endocrinology and Metabolism,
2Neurosurgery, and 3Pathology, Louisiana State University
Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
To whom correspondence should be addressed:
Steven N. Levine, M.D. [E-mail: [email protected]]
Citation: World Neurosurg. (2011).
DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2011.04.018
Journal homepage: www.WORLDNEUROSURGERY.org
Available online: www.sciencedirect.com
1878-8750/$ - see front matter © 2011 Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.
WORLD NEUROSURGER
Cushing disease and negative magnetic resonance imaging finding: A diagnostic and therapeutic challenge
Intrathecal Fluorescein and Sellar Reconstruction in Pituitary Surgery: What Might Be Truly Useful?
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