33 research outputs found

    Green tea halts progression of cardiac transthyretin amyloidosis: an observational report

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    BACKGROUND: Treatment options in patients with amyloidotic transthyretin (ATTR) cardiomyopathy are limited. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), the most abundant catechin in green tea (GT), inhibits fibril formation from several amyloidogenic proteins in vitro. Thus, it might also halt progression of TTR amyloidosis. This is a single-center observational report on the effects of GT consumption in patients with ATTR cardiomopathy. METHODS: 19 patients with ATTR cardiomyopathy were evaluated by standard blood tests, echocardiography, and cardiac MRI (n = 9) before and after consumption of GT and/or green tea extracts (GTE) for 12 months. RESULTS: Five patients were not followed up for reasons of death (n = 2), discontinuation of GT/GTE consumption (n = 2), and heart transplantation (n = 1). After 12 months no increase of left ventricular (LV) wall thickness and LV myocardial mass was observed by echocardiography. In the subgroup of patients evaluated by cardiac MRI a mean decrease of LV myocardial mass (-12.5 %) was detected in all patients. This was accompanied by an increase of mean mitral annular systolic velocity of 9 % in all 14 patients. Total cholesterol (191.9 ± 8.9 vs. 172.7 ± 9.4 mg/dL; p < 0.01) and LDL cholesterol (105.8 ± 7.6 vs. 89.5 ± 8.0 mg/dL; p < 0.01) decreased significantly during the observational period. No serious adverse effects were reported by any of the participants. CONCLUSIONS: Our observation suggests an inhibitory effect of GT and/or GTE on the progression of cardiac amyloidosis. We propose a randomized placebo-controlled investigation to confirm our observation

    Outcome for pediatric adreno-cortical tumors is best predicted by the COG stage and five-item microscopic score — report from the German MET studies

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    Background: Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) encompassing the adrenocortical adenoma (ACA), carcinoma (ACC), and tumors of undetermined malignant potential (ACx) are rare endocrine neoplasms with a poor prognosis. We report on pediatric ACT patients registered with the Malignant Endocrine Tumor studies and explore the EXPeRT recommendations for management. Patients: Data from the ACT patients (<18 years) were analyzed. For the risk prediction, the patients were retrospectively assigned to the COG stages and the five-item score. Results: By December 2021, 161 patients with ACT (ACA n = 51, ACx n = 19, and ACC n = 91) had been reported (the median age at the diagnosis was 4.3 years with a range of 0.1–17.8), with lymph node and distant metastases in 10.7% and 18.9% of the patients with ACC/ACx. The mean follow-up was 4.5 years (with a range of 0–16.7). The three-year overall (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) rates were 65.5% and 50.6%. In the univariate analyses, the OS was impaired for patients aged ≥ 4 years (p = 0.001) with the initial biopsy (p = 0.016), tumor spillage (p = 0.028), incomplete tumor resection (p < 0.001), unfavorable histology (p = 0.047), and COG stages III/IV (p = 0.002). Multivariate analysis revealed COG stages III/IV and an unfavorable five-item score as independent negative prognostic factors for the EFS and OS. Conclusions: Age defines the clinical presentation and prognosis in pediatric ACTs. The outcome is best predicted by the COG stage and five-item score

    Refractory and relapsed paediatric ACC in the MET studies – a challenging situation necessitating novel diagnostic and therapeutic concepts

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    Background Paediatric adrenocortical carcinomas (ACC) are highly aggressive malignancies with a dismal prognosis in advanced and metastatic disease. Little is known about outcome of patients with refractory and relapsed (r/r) disease. Procedure National retrospective multicentre study including r/r ACC diagnosed in patients aged <18 years registered in the MET studies between January 1997 and December 2021 Results A total of 16 patients (5 male; median age 12.9 years) with refractory disease were included. Median time to progression was 0.6 years [0.0-1.3]. Site of progression was locoregional (n=1), distant (n=3), and combined (n=12). 3-year overall (OS) and progression-free (PFS) survival were both 0%. Thirty patients with relapse (11 male; median age 7.3 years) were identified. Median time to relapse was 0.7 years [0.1-3.2]. Site of relapse was locoregional (n=8), distant (n=15), and combined (n=7). At last follow-up, 20 patients had died of disease or complications or were alive with disease, 10 patients were in second complete remission (median follow-up: 6.8 years [0-10.5]). 3-year OS and PFS following relapse were 39.1% and 31.9%. Survival was superior in patients with distant relapse (59.6%) compared to locoregional (28.6%) and combined (14.3%) (p=0.028) and in patients with complete surgical resection of all sites of recurrence (70.0%) compared to incomplete (21.4%) and no surgery (0%) (p=0.003). Conclusions For patients nonresponsive to first-line therapy or who experience relapse, prognosis is dismal and options are scarce. Site of relapse and resectability define prognosis. Novel therapeutic concepts are needed to improve the outcome of paediatric patients with r/r ACC

    Quality assurance in pathology in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis—European recommendations

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    In Europe, colorectal cancer is the most common newly diagnosed cancer and the second most common cause of cancer deaths, accounting for approximately 436,000 incident cases and 212,000 deaths in 2008. The potential of high-quality screening to improve control of the disease has been recognized by the Council of the European Union who issued a recommendation on cancer screening in 2003. Multidisciplinary, evidence-based European Guidelines for quality assurance in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis have recently been developed by experts in a pan-European project coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. The full guideline document consists of ten chapters and an extensive evidence base. The content of the chapter dealing with pathology in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis is presented here in order to promote international discussion and collaboration leading to improvements in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis by making the principles and standards recommended in the new EU Guidelines known to a wider scientific community

    Amyloidose bei Muskeldystrophie [Amyloidosis in muscular dystrophy]

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    Mutations in the gene encoding dysferlin (DYSF) cause limb-girdle muscular dystrophy 2B (LGMD2B) and Miyoshi myopathy (MM). We were able to examine eight patients suspected of LGMD2B clinically, histochemically. The genotype was determined in every case. We found sarcolemmal and interstitial amyloid deposits in four muscle sections. All of the mutations associated with amyloid were located in the N-terminal region of dysferlin, and dysferlin clearly proved to be a component of the amyloid deposits. Dysferlin-deficient muscular dystrophy is the first muscular dystrophy in which amyloidosis is involved. This fact must be considered in the process of developing therapeutic strategies. The influence of the amyloid deposits on the pathogenesis of the disease and the possible involvement of other organs in the progressive course are as yet unclear

    Refractory pseudofollicular Conjunctivitis

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    PTAA and B10: new approaches to amyloid detection in tissue-evaluation of amyloid detection in tissue with a conjugated polyelectrolyte and a fibril-specific antibody fragment

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    Aims: We analysed the suitability of two little known substances for the detection of amyloid in surgical pathology specimens, that is the conjugated polyelectrolyte polythiophene acetic acid (PTAA) and the camelid antibody domain B10. Methods: We compared the amyloid detection of PTAA and B10 to Congo red in 106 amyloid-containing tissue biopsies of diverse anatomical and precursor origin by evaluating the accordance in four grades (grade 0: no staining, grade 1: staining of 66%). Results: PTAA showed grade 2–3 staining in 57 (54%) cases, while B10 presented this accordance in only 25 (24%) tissue biopsies. Grade 1 staining was found in 11 (10%) samples with PTAA and in 62 (58%) cases with B10. No staining at all (grade 0) occurred in 38 (36%) biopsies when using PTAA and in 19 (18%) cases when using B10. Conclusion: Although conformation-sensitive detection seemed promising, PTAA and B10 stain only a fraction of the examined amyloid samples when using routine surgical pathology settings. This study emphasises the necessity of having optimised pre-analytical protocols for recovery, storage and handling of samples if these novel amyloid ligands are to be used in routine diagnosis of amyloid

    Induction of IL-10-balanced immune profiles following exposure to LTA from <em>Staphylococcus&nbsp;epidermidis</em>.

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    Staphylococcus&nbsp;epidermidis colonises human skin without apparent inflammation, but a dominance of S.&nbsp;epidermidis and S.&nbsp;aureus is characteristic of cutaneous microbial dysbiosis in atopic dermatitis (AD). While S.&nbsp;aureus can trigger AD, the role of S.&nbsp;epidermidis is less understood. We characterised consequences of innate immune sensing of lipoteichoic acid (LTA) preparations derived from S.&nbsp;epidermidis (epi-LTA) or S.&nbsp;aureus (aureus-LTA). Therefore, dendritic cell (DC) activation and consecutive priming of antigen-specific T cells following exposure of DC to epi-LTA or aureus-LTA were investigated. Mimicking acute AD, exposure of DC to IL-4 and LTAs was analysed. Exposure to epi-LTA or aureus-LTA activated human immune cells and murine dendritic cells (DCs) via TLR2/MyD88, however, resulting in divergent immune profiles. Differences between LTAs were significant for IL-6, IL-12p40 and IL-12p70 but not for IL-10, which was best reflected by the IL-12p70-to-IL-10 ratio being IL-10-balanced for epi-LTA but pro-inflammatory for aureus-LTA. LTA-exposed DCs activated CD4+ T cells; however, while T-cell-derived IL-10 was equivalent between LTAs, IFN-γ and IL-17 were significantly higher for aureus-LTA. Mimicking acute AD by exposing DCs to IL-4 and LTAs revealed that IL-4 significantly and uniformly suppressed epi-LTA-induced cytokine production, keeping the IL-12p70-to-IL-10 ratio balanced. In contrast, exposure of DCs to aureus-LTA and IL-4 enhanced IL-12p70 but suppressed IL-10 levels, further unbalancing the IL-12p70-to-IL-10 ratio. These data demonstrate opposing immune consequences following exposure to staphylococcal LTAs. Epi-LTA induced IL-10-balanced, aureus-LTA pro-inflammatory immune profiles
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