2 research outputs found

    A telegeriatric service in a small rural hospital: A case study and cost analysis

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    Introduction Small hospitals in rural areas usually have an insufficient caseload of frail old people to justify the regular presence of a geriatrician. This study examined the costs of providing a telegeriatric service by videoconference in a rural hospital, compared to the costs of a visiting geriatrician that travels to undertake in-person consultations. Methods A cost analysis was undertaken to compare the costs of the telegeriatric service model with the costs of a visiting geriatrician service model. A recently established telegeriatric service at Warwick Hospital was used as a case study. Results In the base case model (assuming four patients per round and a round-trip travel distance of 312 kilometres), an estimated AUD$131 per patient consultation can be saved in favour of the telegeriatric service model. Key drivers of costs are the number of patients per round and the travel distance and time in the visiting geriatrician model. At a workload of four patients per round, it is less expensive to conduct a telegeriatric service than a visiting geriatrician service when the round-trip travel time exceeds 76 minutes. Discussion Even under quite conservative assumptions, a telegeriatric service offers an economically feasible approach to the delivery of specialist geriatric assessment in rural and remote settings

    Hypoxia regulation of phosphokinases and the prognostic value of pAKT in breast cancer

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    Tumor hypoxia results in poor treatment response and is an indicator of poor outcome in cancer patients. TRIB3 is a hypoxia-upregulated protein involved in the ability of breast cancer cells to survive in hypoxic conditions. It is also involved in the prognosis of cancer patients, possibly by affecting several kinase-signaling pathways. We set out to establish which kinase-signaling pathways are regulated by hypoxia and whether these kinases are relevant for breast cancer prognosis. Using a phosphokinase antibody array comparing cells cultured under hypoxic conditions with those cultured during normoxia, we found that the phosphorylation status of ERK1/2, AKT, p70 S6 kinase, Lck and STAT3 was altered in both MCF7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. Using Western blotting, we found that phosphorylated AKT (pAKT) increased in hypoxic conditions. Knockdown of TRIB3 attenuated this effect of hypoxia on AKT activation. Both pAKT and TRIB3 were expressed in pimonidazole-positive, hypoxic areas of human breast cancer tumors. In breast cancer patients significantly lower 5-year disease-free survival was observed for the pAKT-positive compared to the pAKT-negative group (64.6% vs 86.1%, p=0.03). In conclusion, the phosphorylation status of AKT is increased in hypoxic conditions and TRIB3 knockdown attenuates this response. Furthermore, pAKT expression denotes a worse prognosis in breast cancer patients. The hypoxia-related activation of AKT could explain the resistance to various treatments including chemotherapy and radiotherap
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