122 research outputs found

    Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma

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    Context: Primary urethral cancer (PUC) is a rare cancer entity. Owing to the low incidence of this malignancy, the main body of literature consists mainly of case reports, making evidence-based management recommendations difficult. Objective: To review reported disease management strategies of PUC and their impact on oncological outcomes. Evidence acquisition: A systematic research was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement using Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science, to find studies of the past 10yr including ≥20 patients, and investigating treatment strategies and their impact on outcomes of the three most frequent histologies: urothelial carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma. Evidence synthesis: In localized PUC, penis-sparing surgery can be performed in males, while in females, complete urethrectomy with surrounding tissue is advised to minimize recurrence due to positive margins. Radiotherapy (RT) has worse survival and recurrence rates, as well as more adverse effects, than surgery, limiting its use in genital-preserving therapy. Locally advanced PUC should be treated with multimodal therapy, as monotherapies result in inferior recurrence and survival rates. Extent of surgery is still undecided, favoring radical cyst(oprostat)ectomy with total urethrectomy (RCU). Lymph node involvement is a predictor of survival, highlighting the role of lymph node dissection for disease control and staging. RT can improve survival in combination with surgery and/or chemotherapy (CHT). Neoadjuvant platinum-based CHT can improve overall and recurrence-free survival. At recurrence, salvage therapy with surgery and/or CHT can improve survival. Superficial urothelial carcinoma of the prostatic urethra can be treated with transurethral resection. Stromal invasion often features concomitant bladder cancer with a poor prognosis and requires RCU with or without systemic preoperative CHT. Conclusions: PUC is a rare malignancy with an often poor natural course, requiring a stage- and gender-specific risk-based treatment strategy. The role of systematic perioperative CHT and the extent of surgery are becoming more important. Patient summary: In this review, we looked at the treatment options for primary urethral cancer. We found that while an organ-confined disease can be managed with local resection, growth beyond the organ border makes a combination of different treatment modalities, such as surgery and systematic chemotherapy, necessary to improve outcomes

    Clinical sequencing identifies potential actionable alterations in a high rate of urachal and primary bladder adenocarcinomas.

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    OBJECTIVE Administration of targeted therapies provides a promising treatment strategy for urachal adenocarcinoma (UrC) or primary bladder adenocarcinoma (PBAC); however, the selection of appropriate drugs remains difficult. Here, we aimed to establish a routine compatible methodological pipeline for the identification of the most important therapeutic targets and potentially effective drugs for UrC and PBAC. METHODS Next-generation sequencing, using a 161 cancer driver gene panel, was performed on 41 UrC and 13 PBAC samples. Clinically relevant alterations were filtered, and therapeutic interpretation was performed by in silico evaluation of drug-gene interactions. RESULTS After data processing, 45/54 samples passed the quality control. Sequencing analysis revealed 191 pathogenic mutations in 68 genes. The most frequent gain-of-function mutations in UrC were found in KRAS (33%), and MYC (15%), while in PBAC KRAS (25%), MYC (25%), FLT3 (17%) and TERT (17%) were recurrently affected. The most frequently affected pathways were the cell cycle regulation, and the DNA damage control pathway. Actionable mutations with at least one available approved drug were identified in 31/33 (94%) UrC and 8/12 (67%) PBAC patients. CONCLUSIONS In this study, we developed a data-processing pipeline for the detection and therapeutic interpretation of genetic alterations in two rare cancers. Our analyses revealed actionable mutations in a high rate of cases, suggesting that this approach is a potentially feasible strategy for both UrC and PBAC treatments

    Clear cell renal cell carcinoma and papillary renal cell carcinoma: differentiation of distinct histological types with multiphase CT

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    PURPOSEConventional clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and papillary renal cell carcinoma (pRCC) have different behavioral characteristics and clinical management strategies (nephrectomy vs. nephron-sparing surgery). Our aim was to retrospectively evaluate the contrast enhancement pattern of ccRCC and pRCC and evaluate its possible diagnostic role for preoperative differentiation using a standardized protocol.MATERIALS AND METHODSQuadriphasic multidetector computed tomography (CT) images (unenhanced, corticomedullary, nephrographic, and excretory phases) of 19 patients with 20 ccRCC and 14 patients with 15 pRCC lesions (mean ages, 62.3±14.1 and 61.4±13.7 years, respectively) were reviewed retrospectively. The attenuation characteristics were compared with the attenuation of the normal renal cortex using either multiple 10 mm2 regions of interest or whole tumor attenuation measurements. The degree of contrast enhancement was also compared.RESULTSUnivariate analysis revealed that ccRCC lesions showed higher mean attenuation values on the corticomedullary and nephrographic phases compared with pRCC masses (P < 0.05) using both measurement techniques.CONCLUSIONThe findings underscore the importance of multiphase CT in the differentiation of these two subtypes of RCC using standard assessment techniques. The measurement of the degree of enhancement on contrast-enhanced multidetector CT may be a simple and useful method to radiologically differentiate between the two histological types of RCC

    Radical penectomy, a compromise for life. Results from the PECAD study

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    Background: The use of organ sparing strategies to treat penile cancer (PC) is currently supported by evidence that has indicated the safety, efficacy and benefit of this surgery. However, radical penectomy still represents up to 15-20% of primary tumor treatments in PC patients. The aim of the study was to evaluate efficacy in terms of overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) of radical penectomy in PC patients. Methods: Data from a retrospective multicenter study (PEnile Cancer ADherence study, PECAD Study) on PC patients treated at 13 European and American urological centers (Hospital “Sant'Andrea”, Sapienza University, Roma, Italy; “G.D'Annunzio” University, Chieti and ASL 2 Abruzzo, Hospital “S. Pio da Pietrelcina”, Vasto, Italy; Department of Genitourinary Oncology, Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, FL, USA; Hospital of Budapest, Hungary; Department of Emergency and Organ Transplantation, Urology and Andrology Unit II, University of Bari, Italy; Hospital “Spedali Civili”, Brescia, Italy; Istituto Europeo di Oncologia, University of Milan, Milan, Italy; University of Modena &amp; Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy; Hospital Universitario La Paz, Madrid, Spain; Ceara Cancer Institute, Fortaleza, Brazil; Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA; Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece; Maria Skłodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer Center, Warsaw, Poland) between 2010 and 2016 were used. Medical records of patients who specifically underwent radical penectomy were reviewed to identify main clinical and pathological variables. Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate 1- and 5-year OS and DFS. Results: Of the entire cohort of 425 patients, 72 patients (16.9%) treated with radical penectomy were extracted and were considered for the analysis. The median age was 64.5 (IQR, 57.5-73.2) years. Of all, 41 (56.9%) patients had pT3/pT4 and 31 (43.1%) pT1/pT2. Moreover, 36 (50.0%) were classified as pN1-3 and 5 (6.9%) M1. Furthermore, 61 (84.7%) had a high grade (G2-G3) with 6 (8.3%) positive surgical margins. The 1- and 5-year OS rates were respectively 73.3% and 59.9%, while the 1- and 5-year DFS rates were respectively 67.3% and 35.1%. Conclusions: PC is an aggressive cancer particularly in more advanced stage. Overall, more than a third of patients do not survive at 5 years and more than 60% report a disease recurrence, despite the use of a radical treatment

    Identification and replication of the interplay of four genetic high risk variants for urinary bladder cancer

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    Little is known whether genetic variants identified in genome-wide association studies interact to increase bladder cancer risk. Recently, we identified two- and three-variant combinations associated with a particular increase of bladder cancer risk in a urinary bladder cancer case-control series (IfADo, 1501 cases, 1565 controls). In an independent case-control series (Nijmegen Bladder Cancer Study, NBCS, 1468 cases, 1720 controls) we confirmed these two- and three-variant combinations. Pooled analysis of the two studies as discovery group (IfADo-NBCS) resulted in sufficient statistical power to test up to four-variant combinations by a logistic regression approach. The New England and Spanish Bladder Cancer Studies (2080 cases and 2167 controls) were used as a replication series. Twelve previously identified risk variants were considered.The strongest four-variant combination was obtained in never smokers. The combination of rs1014971[AA] near APOBEC3A and CBX6, SLC14A1 exon SNP rs1058396[AG,GG], UGT1A intron SNP rs11892031[AA], and rs8102137[CC,CT] near CCNE resulted in an unadjusted odds ratio of 2.59 (95% CI = 1.93-3.47; P = 1.87x10-10), while the individual variant odds ratios ranged only between 1.11-1.30. The combination replicated in the New England and Spanish bladder Cancer Studies (ORunadjusted=1.60, 95% CI = 1.10-2.33; P = 0.013). The four-variant combination is relatively frequent, with 25% in never smoking cases and 11% in never smoking controls (total study group: 19% cases, 14% controls). In conclusion, we show that four high risk variants can statistically interact to confer increased bladder cancer risk particularly in never smokers

    Némethy, Judith Kesserű, ed. 2015. <i>21st Century Hungarian Language Survival in Transylvania.</i> Reno, NV: Helena History Press. 366 pp. Maps.

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    Review of 21st Century Hungarian Language Survival in Transylvania.  Edited by Judith Kesserű Némethy. Helena History Press [2015]

    Early academic outcomes and social skills of Latino children: Exploring the immigrant paradox in a young cohort

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    Children of immigrants currently represent one of every five students in grades K-12; predictions are that by 2040 the ratio will change to one in three. Within the last decade alone, the number of Latino children entering the public school system grew 68 percent. Current research indicates a paradox: in spite of greater socioeconomic risk factors, many first and second generation Latino high school youth demonstrate more positive academic outcomes and fewer high-risk behaviors than their third+ generation ethnic peers. However, limited research has explored the presence of similar generational patterns in an early elementary school cohort. The purpose of this study was (1) to examine child, parent, and family characteristics of immigrant Latino children (ILC) with foreign-born parents and nonimmigrant Latino children (NILC) with U.S.-born parents to determine if the “immigrant paradox” could be found in a primarily low income cohort of elementary school children, and (2) to explore the family context in which Latino children develop academic and social skills, identifying variables that encouraged positive outcomes. The theoretical perspectives framing this research included systems theory, nested in an integrated model that considered the context of the Latino family’s cultural values and experiences, and segmented assimilation theory, which provided a path to understanding generational differences. The data were from The National Head Start/Public School Early Childhood Transition Demonstration Study (1992-1998), a longitudinal study of a predominantly low income, former Head Start population followed from kindergarten through third grade. Sixty-eight percent of the 1000+ Latino children in the dataset were ILC. Data analysis techniques included descriptive statistics, bivariate analysis, and multiple regression models. The findings confirmed the presence of the immigrant paradox in a young cohort. Although ILC families struggled with poverty, lack of social benefits, and low parental education, strong parenting skills and cultural values were associated with children realizing positive academic outcomes and high social skills. NILC families possessed significantly more resources and parent educational achievement than earlier generations but had less effective parenting practices than ILC families and characteristics mirroring other lowincome U.S. minorities - more teen mothers and single-parent households, and higher use of welfare benefits. Although there were no significant differences between ILC and NILC reading and math scores, teachers assessed NILC as having fewer social skills and more classroom problem behaviors than ILC. The findings suggest that changes in Latino family structure, family resources and parenting behaviors occurred over generations, and that assimilation into a low-income minority group may result in less than positive outcomes for parents and children. A separate analysis of Mexican and Salvadoran families identified differences in characteristics and outcomes, suggesting that specific immigrant journeys and the presence of established subgroup communities may influence resources and outcomes. Studies have shown that third grade achievement may predict a child’s academic future (Entwistle, Alexander, & Olson, 2003). Optimal long-term outcomes for Latino children require social policies and programs that incorporate Latino cultural strengths and values, promote effective parenting practices and support families by expanding access to social resources
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