41 research outputs found

    Structural brain alterations of Down’s syndrome in early childhood evaluation by DTI and volumetric analyses

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    Objectives: To provide an initial assessment of white matter (WM) integrity with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and the accompanying volumetric changes in WM and grey matter (GM) through volumetric analyses of young children with Down’s syndrome (DS). Methods: Ten children with DS and eight healthy control subjects were included in the study. Tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) were used in the DTI study for whole-brain voxelwise analysis of fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) of WM. Volumetric analyses were performed with an automated segmentation method to obtain regional measurements of cortical volumes. Results: Children with DS showed significantly reduced FA in association tracts of the fronto-temporo-occipital regions as well as the corpus callosum (CC) and anterior limb of the internal capsule (p < 0.05). Volumetric reductions included total cortical GM, cerebellar GM and WM volume, basal ganglia, thalamus, brainstem and CC in DS compared with controls (p < 0.05). Conclusion: These preliminary results suggest that DTI and volumetric analyses may reflect the earliest complementary changes of the neurodevelopmental delay in children with DS and can serve as surrogate biomarkers of the specific elements of WM and GM integrity for cognitive development. Key Points: ‱ DS is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability. ‱ WM and GM structural alterations represent the neurological features of DS. ‱ DTI may identify the earliest aging process changes. ‱ DTI-volumetric analyses can serve as surrogate biomarkers of neurodevelopment in DS. © 2016, European Society of Radiology

    Cancer-specific mortality free survival rates in non-metastatic non-clear cell renal carcinoma patients at intermediate/high risk of recurrence

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    BACKGROUND: To date, five trials testing the effect of adjuvant systemic therapy in surgically treated non-metastatic renal cell carcinoma included patients with non-clear cell histology. We tested the effect of papillary vs. chromophobe histological subtype, stage, and grade on 10-year cancer-specific survival, in patients eligible for &amp; GE;1 such trial.METHODS: We identified patients meeting ASSURE, SORCE, EVEREST, PROSPER, or RAMPART trial inclusion criteria in the SEER (2000-2018) database. Kaplan-Meier analyses estimated 10-year survival rates and multivariable Cox regression models tested for the independent predictor status of histological subtype, stage, and grade.RESULTS: We identified 5465 (68%) papillary and 2562 (32%) chromophobe renal cell carcinoma patients. Cancer -specific survival rates at 10 years were 77% in papillary vs. 90% in chromophobe. In multivariable Cox regression models applied to papillary patients, cancer-specific mortality independent predictor status was reached for T3G3-4 (HR 2.9), T4Gany (HR 3.4), TanyN1G1-2 (HR 3.1), and TanyN1G3-4 (HR 8.0, P&lt;0.001), relative to T1/2Gany. In multivariable Cox regression models applied to chromophobe patients, mortality independent predictor status was reached for T3G3-4 (HR 3.6), T4Gany (HR 14.0), TanyN1G1-2 (HR 5.7), and TanyN1G3-4 (HR 15.0, P&lt;0.001), relative to T1/2Gany.CONCLUSIONS: In surgically treated non-metastatic intermediate/high-risk renal cell carcinoma patients, papillary histologic subtype exhibited worse cancer-specific survival than chromophobe histologic subtype. Although stage and grade represented independent predictors in both histological subtype groups, the magnitude of their effect was invari-ably worse in chromophobe than in papillary patients. In consequence, papillary and chromophobe patients should be considered separate entities instead of being combined under the non-clear cell designation
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