An association between raised renin levels and myocardial infarction has been reported. We studied the effects of enalapril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, on the development of myocardial infarction and unstable angina in 6797 patients with ejection fractions < or = 0.35 enrolled into the two Studies of Left Ventricular Dysfunction (SOLVD) trials. Patients were randomly assigned to placebo (n = 3401) or enalapril (n = 3396) at doses of 2.5-20 mg per day in two concurrent double-blind trials with the same protocol. Patients with heart failure entered the treatment trial (n = 2569) and those without heart failure entered the prevention trial (n = 4228). Follow-up averaged 40 months. In each trial there were significant reductions in the number of patients developing myocardial infarction (treatment trial: 158 placebo vs 127 enalapril, p < 0.02; prevention trial: 204 vs 161 p < 0.01) or unstable angina (240 vs 187 p < 0.001; 355 vs 312, p < 0.05). Combined, there were 362 placebo group patients with myocardial infarction compared with 288 in the enalapril group (risk reduction 23%, 95% CI 11-34%; p < 0.001). 595 placebo group patients developed unstable angina compared with 499 in the enalapril group (risk reduction 20%, 95% CI 9-29%, p < 0.001). There was also a reduction in cardiac deaths (711 placebo, 615 enalapril; p < 0.003), so that the reduction in the combined endpoint of deaths, myocardial infarction, and unstable angina was highly significant (20% risk reduction, 95% CI 14-26%; p < 0.0001). Enalapril treatment significantly reduced myocardial infarction, unstable angina, and cardiac mortality in patients with low ejection fractions.
BACKGROUND Treatment options are limited for patients with advanced acquired immunodeficieny syndrome (AIDS)‐related Kaposi sarcoma (AIDS‐KS) whose disease has progressed after receiving therapy with liposomal anthracyclines or combination chemotherapy with doxorubicin (Adriamycin), bleomycin, and vincristine (ABV). This study was performed to assess the safety and efficacy of a novel dose and schedule of paclitaxel in patients with AIDS‐KS who failed to respond to previous systemic chemotherapy. METHODS This was an open‐label, multicenter Phase II study. Eligible patients had advanced AIDS‐KS consisting of at least 25 mucocutaneous lesions, visceral disease, or lymphedema, and had failed to respond to at least one previous systemic chemotherapy regimen. Patients were treated with paclitaxel at a dose of 100 mg/m2 given intravenously over 3 hours, every 2 weeks. Primary efficacy end points were tumor response, time to progression, time to treatment failure, and survival. Quality of life and adverse events were evaluated using the Symptom Distress Scale (SDS) and the World Health Organization Toxicity Criteria, respectively. RESULTS One hundred and seven male patients with advanced AIDS‐KS were enrolled from nine participating sites. The median entry CD4+ lymphocyte count was 41/mm3 (range 0–1139). Previous treatment regimens included ABV in 52, liposomal daunorubicin in 49, and liposomal doxorubicin in 40 patients. Forty‐one patients (38%) received two or more previous chemotherapy regimens. Protease inhibitor use during the study was reported by 82 (77%) patients overall; 47 patients (44%) were receiving a protease inhibitor before study entry. Complete or partial response was documented in 60 patients (56%). The median duration of response was 8.9 months. Major response rate was similar when comparing patients not on a protease inhibitor at the time of response (59%) with patients on a protease inhibitor at time of response (54%). However, protease inhibitor use had a significant impact on survival (P = 0.04). Grade 4 neutropenia was reported in 35% of patients; other life‐threatening side effects were uncommon. Significant improvements were seen in the total quality of life scores measured by the SDS, including significant improvement in KS‐related symptoms such as facial disease, tumor‐associated edema, and pulmonary involvement. CONCLUSION Paclitaxel given every 2 weeks induces major tumor regression in the majority of patients with advanced KS who failed to respond to previous systemic chemotherapy. Paclitaxel is associated with significant improvement in quality of life with acceptable toxicity and should be considered as an effective treatment option for patients with advanced KS. Cancer 2002;95:147–54. © 2002 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.10634
Sclerostin, encoded by the SOST gene, works as an inhibitor of the Wnt pathway and therefore is an important regulator of bone homeostasis. Due to its potent action as an inhibitor of bone formation, blocking sclerostin activity is the purpose of recently developed anti-osteoporotic treatments. Two bone-specific transcription factors, RUNX2 and OSX, have been shown to interact and co-ordinately regulate the expression of bone-specific genes. Although it has been recently shown that sclerostin is targeted by OSX in mice, there is currently no information of whether this is also the case in human cells. We have identified SP-protein family and AML1 consensus binding sequences at the human SOST promoter and have shown that OSX, together with RUNX2, binds to a specific region close to the transcription start site. Furthermore, we show that OSX and RUNX2 activate SOST expression in a co-ordinated manner in vitro and that SOST expression levels show a significant positive correlation with OSX/RUNX2 expression levels in human bone. We also confirmed previous results showing an association of several SOST/RUNX2 polymorphisms with bone mineral density.
Common genetic variations of the aromatase and ER genes are associated with the risk of severe OA of the large joints of the lower limb in a sex-specific manner. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that estrogen activity may influence the development of large-joint OA.
Objective. Estrogen deprivation is a central mechanism in the development of osteoporosis with aging.Results from recent studies also suggest the involvement of estrogens in the pathophysiology of osteoarthritis (OA). Aromatization of androgenic precursors in peripheral tissue is the main source of estrogens in postmenopausal women and in men. However, the importance of aromatase expression in bone is a subject of controversy. This study was undertaken to determine aromatase expression in bone samples from patients with hip fracture and patients with OA.Methods. We studied 104 patients with hip fracture (n ؍ 60) or primary hip OA (n ؍ 44). Aromatase expression was determined in trabecular bone samples from the femoral neck and in osteoblast cultures grown by the primary explant technique (n ؍ 62), using real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction.Results. Aromatase RNA was detected in bone samples at levels similar to those found in adipose tissue. Transcript levels were significantly lower in bone tissue samples obtained from patients with OA than in those obtained from patients with fracture (P ؍ 0.00001). Likewise, primary cultures of osteoblast cells from OA patients revealed lower aromatase expression than those of cells from fracture patients (P ؍ 0.012). Results were independent of age or sex differences. Conclusion. Our findings indicate that the aro-
Soft-tissue angiomatosis is a rare condition characterized by diffuse proliferation of benign vascular structures, accompanied by mature adipose tissue, which affect a large segment of the body in a contiguous fashion. Most patients present in childhood or adolescence. We report a case of large soft-tissue angiomatosis, located in the left forearm of a 65-year-old man, which showed extensive intramuscular and intermuscular infiltration, and embracement of the radius and the main vascular and neural bundles of the forearm. Due to the deep location, large size, ill-defined limits and non-homogeneous composition with areas suggestive of an adipose component in the radiological examination, the lesion raised the possibility clinically of a liposarcoma. The myxoid adipose tissue component of the lesion, a feature previously undescribed, and the predominance of small, capillary-sized vessels were considered concordant with the clinical diagnosis. This presentation is rare. The features of the lesion made complete surgical excision impossible and amputation of the extremity was considered the best treatment. The main differential diagnoses include infiltrating lipoma, myxolipoma, angiomyxolipoma, angiolipoma, intramuscular angioma, liposarcoma and low-grade myxofibrosarcoma. In conclusion, angiomatosis might simulate liposarcoma, particularly if the mass is large, heterogeneous, myxoid and appears later in life.
Hereditary factors have a strong influence on osteoarthritis (OA). The Wnt pathway is involved in bone and cartilage homeostasis. Hence, we hypothesized that allelic variations of WNT16 could influence the OA phenotype. We studied 509 Caucasian patients undergoing joint replacement due to severe primary OA. Radiographs were used to classify the OA as atrophic or hypertrophic. Two nonsynonymous polymorphisms of WNT16 (rs2707466 and rs2908004) were analyzed. The association between the genotypes and the OA phenotype was analyzed by logistic regression and adjusted for age and body mass index. A genotype-phenotype association was found in the sex-stratified analysis. Thus, there was a significant difference in the genotypic frequencies of rs2707466 between hypertrophic and atrophic hip OA in males (p = 0.003), with overrepresentation of G alleles in the hypertrophic phenotype (OR 2.08; CI 1.28-3.38). An association in the same direction was observed between these alleles and the type of knee OA, with G alleles being more common in the hypertrophic than in atrophic knee phenotypes (p = 0.008; OR 1.956, CI 1.19-3.19). Similar associations were found for the rs2908004 SNP, but it only reached statistical significance for knee OA (p = 0.017; OR 0.92, CI 0.86-0.989). This is the first study attempting to explore the association of genetic variants with the OA phenotype. These data suggest the need to consider the OA phenotype in future genetic association studies of OA.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.