5 research outputs found

    Pheochromocytoma associated with a succinate dehydrogenase subunit B mutation: A minireview and a case report

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    Objective. Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas are rare neuroendocrine tumors that arise from the chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla or extra-adrenal tissues. These tumors are characterized by an excessive secretion of catecholamines, which are responsible for the clinical manifestation of the disease. Although most of these tumors are sporadic, underlying genetic abnormalities may be present in up to 24% of the cases. A succinate dehydrogenase subunit B (SDHB) mutation represents one of the rare presentations of the disease. In this study, we represent a rare case of pheochromocytoma associated with SDHB mutation

    Postradioiodine Graves' management: The PRAGMA study

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    Objective: Thyroid status in the months following radioiodine (RI) treatment for Graves' disease can be unstable. Our objective was to quantify frequency of abnormal thyroid function post-RI and compare effectiveness of common management strategies. Design: Retrospective, multicentre and observational study. Patients: Adult patients with Graves' disease treated with RI with 12 months' follow-up. Measurements: Euthyroidism was defined as both serum thyrotropin (thyroid-stimulating hormone [TSH]) and free thyroxine (FT4) within their reference ranges or, when only one was available, it was within its reference range; hypothyroidism as TSH ≥ 10 mU/L, or subnormal FT4 regardless of TSH; hyperthyroidism as TSH below and FT4 above their reference ranges; dysthyroidism as the sum of hypo- and hyperthyroidism; subclinical hypothyroidism as normal FT4 and TSH between the upper limit of normal and <10 mU/L; and subclinical hyperthyroidism as low TSH and normal FT4. Results: Of 812 patients studied post-RI, hypothyroidism occurred in 80.7% and hyperthyroidism in 48.6% of patients. Three principal post-RI management strategies were employed: (a) antithyroid drugs alone, (b) levothyroxine alone, and (c) combination of the two. Differences among these were small. Adherence to national guidelines regarding monitoring thyroid function in the first 6 months was low (21.4%–28.7%). No negative outcomes (new-onset/exacerbation of Graves' orbitopathy, weight gain, and cardiovascular events)were associated with dysthyroidism. There were significant differences in demographics, clinical practice, and thyroid status postradioiodine between centres. Conclusions: Dysthyroidism in the 12 months post-RI was common. Differences between post-RI strategies were small, suggesting these interventions alone are unlikely to address the high frequency of dysthyroidism

    Antibiotic Review Kit for Hospitals (ARK-Hospital): a stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial

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    Background: Strategies to reduce antibiotic overuse in hospitals depend on prescribers taking decisions to stop unnecessary antibiotics. There is limited evidence on how to support this. We evaluated a multifaceted behaviour change intervention (ARK) designed to reduce antibiotic use among adult acute/medical inpatients by increasing appropriate decisions to stop antibiotics at clinical review. Methods: We performed a stepped-wedge, cluster (hospital)-randomised controlled trial using computer-generated sequence randomisation of 39 hospitals in 7 calendar-time blocks in the United Kingdom (25/September/2017-01/July/2019). Randomised implementation date was concealed until 12 weeks before implementation, when local preparations were designed to start. Co-primary outcomes were monthly antibiotic defined-daily-doses (DDD) per adult acute/medical admission (hospital-level, superiority) and all-cause 30-day mortality (patient level, non-inferiority, margin 5%). Sites were eligible if they admitted non-elective medical patients, could identify an intervention “champion”, and provide study data. Sites werefollowed for at least 14 months. Intervention effects were assessed using interrupted timeseries analyses within each site, estimating overall effects through random-effects meta analysis, with heterogeneity across prespecified potential modifiers assessed using meta regression.Trial registration: ISRCTN12674243.Findings: Adjusted estimates showed reductions in total antibiotic DDDs per acute/medicaladmission (-4.8% per year, 95% CI: -9.1%,-0.2%) following the intervention. Among7,160,421 acute/medical admissions, there were trends towards -2.7% (95% CI: -5.7%,+0.3%) immediate and +3.0% (95% CI: -0.1%,+6.2%) sustained changes in adjusted30-day mortality. Site-specific mortality trends were unrelated to the site-specific magnitudeof antibiotic reduction (Spearman’s ρ=0.011, p=0.949). Whilst 90-day mortality oddsappeared to increase (+3.9%, 95% CI: +0.5%,+7.4%), this was attenuated excludingadmissions after COVID-19 onset (+3.2%, 95% CI:-1.5%,+8.2%). There was no evidence ofintervention effects on length-of-stay (p&gt;0.4).Interpretation: The weak, inconsistent intervention effects on mortality are likely explained by the post-implementation onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The ARK intervention resulted in sustained, safe reductions in antibiotic use among adult acute/medical inpatients. Funding: NIHR Programme Grants for Applied Research, RP-PG-0514-20015
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