126 research outputs found
A Giant Mucinous Adenocarcinoma Arising within a Villous Adenoma of the Urachus: Case Report and Review of the Literature
We present an exceptional case of a giant urachal tumor, consisting of both villous adenoma and mucinous adenocarcinoma of the urachus. The tumor was incidentally discovered during investigations for renal failure. Initial transurethral biopsies showed only a villous adenoma of the urachus. Although the biopsies showed no malignancy, a radical cystoprostatectomy and broad excision of the urachus and umbilicus were performed. At the same time, a bilateral nephroureterectomy was performed because of reflux-nephropathy and renal failure. The indication for surgery was based on the typical imaging aspects, raising the suspicion of an underlying urachal adenocarcinoma (size and location). Indeed, at final histopathology a concomitant well-differentiated adenocarcinoma of the urachus confined to the urachal mucosa was found. The patient remained free of disease for 50 months of follow-up. Only three previous cases of urachal adenocarcinoma associated with villous adenoma have been described
Laparoscopic Nephroureterectomy: The Distal Ureteral Dilemma
Transitional cell carcinoma affecting the upper urinary tract, though uncommon, constitutes a serious urologic disease. Radical nephroureterectomy remains the treatment of choice but has undergone numerous modifications over the years. Although the standard technique has not been defined, the laparoscopic approach has gained in popularity in the last two decades. The most appropriate oncological management of the distal ureteral and bladder cuff has been a subject of much debate. The aim of the nephroureterectomy procedure is to remove the entire ipsilateral upper tract in continuity while avoiding extravesical transfer of tumor-containing urine during bladder surgery. A myriad of technical modifications have been described. In this article, we review the literature and present an overview of the options for dealing with the lower ureter during radical nephroureterectomy
Metabolic Changes after Urinary Diversion
Urinary diversion is performed on a regular basis in urological practice. Surgeons tend to
underestimate the metabolic effects of any type of diversion. From the patient's perspective, diarrhea
is the most bothersome complaint after urinary diversion. This might be accompanied by
malabsorption syndromes, such as vitamin B12 deficiency. Electrolyte abnormalities can occur
frequently such as hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, or less frequently such as hypokalemia,
hypocalcaemia, and hypomagnesaemia. Bone health is at risk in patients with urinary diversion. Some
patients might benefit from vitamin D and calcium supplementation. Many patients are also subject
to urinary calculus formation, both at the level of the upper urinary tract as in intestinal reservoirs.
Urinary diversion can affect hepatic metabolism, certainly in the presence of urea-splitting bacteria.
The kidney function has to be monitored prior to and lifelong after urinary diversion. Screening for
reversible causes of renal deterioration is an integral part of the followup
Renal Cell Carcinoma with Synchronous Metastasis to the Calcaneus and Metachronous Metastases to the Ovary and Gallbladder
Renal cell carcinomas (RCCs) are known for their unpredictable metastatic pattern. We present the case of a 63-year-old woman who initially presented in 1992 with a metastasis in the left calcaneus that led to the discovery of RCC. In 1998, a new metastasis was found in the ovary. In 2008, the diagnosis of a gallbladder metastasis was made. All metastases were surgically removed; no additional systemic therapies were used. Aggressive surgical treatment can prolong the survival of patients with resectable metastases. Patterns of metastasis are discussed, and a brief review of the literature is given regarding each localization
Ensuring Consistent European-Wide Urological Care by the Use of Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines : Can We Do Better
This study was supported by the European Association of Urology.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Giant growth rate in nano-oxidation of p-silicon surfaces by using ethyl alcohol liquid bridges
We demonstrate that local oxidation nanolithography can be performed in liquid environments different from aqueous solutions with a significant improvement in the aspect ratio of the fabricated motives. Here, we perform a comparative study of noncontact atomic force microscopy oxidation
experiments in water and ethyl alcohol. The growth rate of local oxides can be increased by almost an order of magnitude by using oxyanions from ethyl alcohol molecules. We propose that the enhanced growth rate is a consequence of the reduction of the trapped charges within the growing oxide. The present results open the possibility of using local oxidation nanolithography to directly fabricate vertical oxide structures while keeping lateral sizes in the nanometer range.This work was supported by the European Commission (MONA-LISA, G5RD-2000-00349).Peer reviewe
Navigating through the Controversies and Emerging Paradigms in Early Detection of Prostate Cancer:Bridging the Gap from Classic RCTs to Modern Population-Based Pilot Programs
Over the last three decades, the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC) and the US-based Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening have steered the conversation around the early detection of prostate cancer. These two randomized trials assessed the effect of screening on prostate cancer disease-specific mortality. Elevated PSA levels were followed by a systematic sextant prostate biopsy. Standard repeat testing intervals were applied. After controversies from 2009 to 2016 due to contradicting results of the two trials, the results aligned in 2016 and showed that early PSA detection reduces prostate cancer-specific mortality. However, overdiagnosis rates of up to 50% were reported, and this sparked an intense debate on harms and benefits for almost 20 years. The balance between harms and benefits is highly debated and has initiated further research to investigate new ways of early detection. In the meantime, the knowledge and tools for the diagnostic algorithm improved. This is a continuously ongoing effort which focuses on individual risk-based screening algorithms that preserve the benefits of the purely PSA-based screening algorithms, while reducing the side effects. An important push towards investigating new techniques for early detection came from the European Commission on the 20th of September 2022. The European Commission published its updated recommendation to investigate prostate, lung, and gastric cancer early detection programs. This opened a new window of opportunity to move away from the trial setting to population-based early detection settings. With this review, we aim to review 30 years of historical evidence of prostate cancer screening, which led to the initiation of the 'The Prostate Cancer Awareness and Initiative for Screening in the European Union' (PRAISE-U) project, which aims to encourage the early detection and diagnosis of PCa through customized and risk-based screening programs.</p
International evaluation of the psychometrics of health-related quality of life questionnaires for use among long-term survivors of testicular and prostate cancer
Background: Understanding of the physical, functional and psychosocial health problems and needs of cancer survivors requires cross-national and cross-cultural standardization of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) questionnaires that capture the full range of issues relevant to cancer survivors. To our knowledge, only one study has investigated in a comprehensive way whether a questionnaire used to evaluate HRQoL in cancer patients under active treatment is also reliable and valid when used among (long-term) cancer survivors. In this study we evaluated, in an international context, the psychometrics of HRQoL questionnaires for use among long-term, disease-free, survivors of testicular and prostate cancer. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, we recruited long-term survivors of testicular and prostate cancer from Northern and Southern Europe and from the United Kingdom who had participated in two phase III EORTC clinical trials. Participants completed the SF-36 Health Survey, the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire, the QLQ-PR25 (for prostate cancer) or the QLQ-TC26 (for testicular cancer) questionnaires, and the Impact of Cancer questionnaire. Testicular cancer survivors also completed subscales from the Nordic Questionnaire for Monitoring the Age Diverse Workforce. Results: Two hundred forty-two men (66% response rate) were recruited into the study. The average time since treatment was more than 10 years. Overall, there were few missing questionnaire data, although scales related to sexuality, satisfaction with care and relationship concern
Potato late blight field resistance from QTL dPI09c is conferred by the NB-LRR gene R8
Following the often short-lived protection that major nucleotide binding, leucine-rich-repeat (NB-LRR) resistance genes offer against the potato pathogen Phytophthora infestans, field resistance was thought to provide a more durable alternative to prevent late blight disease. We previously identified the QTL dPI09c on potato chromosome 9 as a more durable field resistance source against late blight. Here, the resistance QTL was fine-mapped to a 186 kb region. The interval corresponds to a larger, 389 kb, genomic region in the potato reference genome of Solanum tuberosum Group Phureja doubled monoploid clone DM1-3 (DM) and from which functional NB-LRRs R8, R9a, Rpi-moc1, and Rpi-vnt1 have arisen independently in wild species. dRenSeq analysis of parental clones alongside resistant and susceptible bulks of the segregating population B3C1HP showed full sequence representation of R8. This was independently validated using long-range PCR and screening of a bespoke bacterial artificial chromosome library. The latter enabled a comparative analysis of the sequence variation in this locus in diverse Solanaceae. We reveal for the first time that broad spectrum and durable field resistance against P. infestans is conferred by the NB-LRR gene R8, which is thought to provide narrow spectrum race-specific resistance
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