Ovarian malignant melanoma (MM), primary or metastatic, is an extremely rare tumor and in the absence of a previous diagnosis can represent a diagnostic challenge. We present the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of 23 cases seen in our institution over a period of 40 years (1962-2001). The patients' age ranged from 14 to 53 years (mean 35.7 years). Ethnicity was known in 19 patients: 14 white, 4 Hispanic, and 1 black. A previous history of MM was definitively obtained in 14 patients; in these cases, the interval between the primary MM and the ovarian metastasis ranged from 15 to 228 months (mean 77.7 months). The tumor was unilateral in 19 and bilateral in 4 cases. The tumor size ranged from 4.5 to 23 cm (average 10 cm); the melanoma arising in a cystic teratoma was 0.2 mm in thickness. The tumor was grossly pigmented in 8 cases (35%). The architectural pattern was nodular (8 cases), diffuse (6 cases), nodular and diffuse (5 cases), nested (3 cases), and lentiginous arising in a teratoma (1 case). Follicle-like spaces were seen in 8 cases, pseudo-glandular areas in 1 case, pseudo-myxoid areas in 1 case, and cords in 1 case. The tumor cell type was epithelioid in 19 cases, spindled in 2 cases, mixed epithelioid and spindled in 1 case, and small cell in 1 case. Nucleoli were prominent in 18 cases, and nuclear inclusions were present but rare in the majority of cases. Nuclear grooves were seen in 3 cases. Necrosis was extensive in 8 cases, focal in 10 cases, and was absent in 5 cases. In 8 cases, initial diagnoses included sex cord stromal tumor, germ cell tumor, sarcoma, or undifferentiated carcinoma. S-100 was positive in 18 of 19 cases, HMB-45 in 17 of 20 cases, MART-1 in 13 of 15 cases, tyrosinase in 10 of 15 cases, and Mitf in 8 of 14 cases. Inhibin was positive in 3 of 14 cases. Calretinin was focally positive in 1 of 12 cases. Treatment performed in 18 of the cases are as follows: oophorectomy with/without chemotherapy (10); total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with/without chemotherapy (6); vaginal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and chemotherapy (1); and total abdominal hysterectomy with salpingo-oophorectomy (1). Follow-up ranging from 2 to 96 months was available in 18 patients. All but one had metastases in other organs, most often in the lungs. Thirteen patients died of disease (range 2-76 months), 3 are alive with disease (6-18 months), and 2 have no evidence of disease at 24 and 96 months; one was the patient with melanoma arising within a teratoma. In conclusion, MM involving the ovary is a rare disease, predominantly seen in women of reproductive age, and is associated with a poor prognosis. The tumor is most often metastatic from another site and is unilateral in most cases. Nodular or diffuse pattern and epithelioid cell type are most frequently seen, and the tumor can be mistaken for germ cell and sex cord stromal tumors. S-100 is the most sensitive marker. MART-1 was positive in the few cases that were negative with HMB-45. Inhibin ca...
Objective Smartphone health applications (apps) are being increasingly used to assist patients in chronic disease self-management. The effects of such apps on patient outcomes are uncertain, as are design features that maximise usability and efficacy, and the best methods for evaluating app quality and utility. Methods In assessing efficacy, PubMed, Cochrane Library and EMBASE were searched for systematic reviews (and single studies if no systematic review was available) published between January 2007 and January 2018 using search terms (and synonyms) of ‘smartphone’ and ‘mobile applications’, and terms for each of 11 chronic diseases: asthma, chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD), diabetes, chronic pain, serious mental health disorders, alcohol and substance addiction, heart failure, ischaemic heart disease, cancer, cognitive impairment, chronic kidney disease (CKD). With regard to design features and evaluation methods, additional reviews were sought using search terms ‘design’, ‘quality,’ ‘usability’, ‘functionality,’ ‘adherence’, ‘evaluation’ and related synonyms. Results Of 13 reviews and six single studies assessing efficacy, consistent evidence of benefit was seen only with apps for diabetes, as measured by decreased glycosylated haemoglobin levels (HbA1c). Some, but not all, studies showed benefit in asthma, low back pain, alcohol addiction, heart failure, ischaemic heart disease and cancer. There was no evidence of benefit in COPD, cognitive impairment or CKD. In all studies, benefits were clinically marginal and none related to morbid events or hospitalisation. Twelve design features were identified as enhancing usability. An evaluation framework comprising 32 items was formulated. Conclusion Evidence of clinical benefit of most available apps is very limited. Design features that enhance usability and maximise efficacy were identified. A provisional ‘first-pass’ evaluation framework is proposed that can help decide which apps should be endorsed by government agencies following more detailed technical assessments and which could then be recommended with confidence by clinicians to their patients. What is known about the topic? Smartphone health apps have attracted considerable interest from patients and health managers as a means of promoting more effective self-management of chronic diseases, which leads to better health outcomes. However, most commercially available apps have never been evaluated for benefits or harms in clinical trials, and there are currently no agreed quality criteria, standards or regulations to ensure health apps are user-friendly, accurate in content, evidence based or efficacious. What does this paper add? This paper presents a comprehensive review of evidence relating to the efficacy, usability and evaluation of apps for 11 common diseases aimed at assisting patients in self-management. Consistent evidence of benefit was only seen for diabetes apps; there was absent or conflicting evidence of benefit for apps for the remaining 10 diseases. Benefits that were detected were of marginal clinical importance, with no reporting of hard clinical end-points, such as mortality or hospitalisations. Only a minority of studies explicitly reported using behaviour change theories to underpin the app intervention. Many apps lacked design features that the literature identified as enhancing usability and potential to confer benefit. Despite a plethora of published evaluation tools, there is no universal framework that covers all relevant clinical and technical attributes. An inclusive list of evaluation criteria is proposed that may overcome this shortcoming. What are the implications for practitioners? The number of smartphone apps will continue to grow, as will the appetite for patients and clinicians to use them in chronic disease self-management. However, the evidence to date of clinical benefit of most apps already available is very limited. Design features that enhance usability and clinical efficacy need to be considered. In making decisions about which apps should be endorsed by government agencies and recommended with confidence by clinicians to their patients, a comprehensive but workable evaluation framework needs to be used by bodies assuming the roles of setting and applying standards.
Metal binding to ligands with the potential of existing in different tautomeric structures can dramatically alter the tautomeric equilibrium by stabilizing a particular, frequently minor, tautomer. The assumption that metal complexation of a minor tautomer is chemically irrelevant because of its very low abundance is misleading and in many cases wrong. In fact, from available X-ray structural data on metal-nucleobase complexes it is evident that metal binding to rare, as opposed to preferred tautomers, is anything but an exception. This "promotion of rare tautomers" through metal coordination is of particular biological relevance in the case of nucleobases because any deviation from Watson-Crick base pairing is potentially mutagenic. In recent years models of "metal-stabilized rare nucleobase tautomers" have been characterized for all common DNA nucleobases, including by X-ray crystallography. Though metal binding causes relatively minor structural changes in the nucleobases, electronic changes as expressed by acid-base properties, for example, can be substantial. In this perspective article the biological consequences of the occupation of nucleobase sites by a metal entity and the altered acid-base chemistry of the nucleobase with regard to base mismatch formation, prevention of base pairing, and acid-base catalysis in nucleic acids are examined. Although not relevant to biology, the behaviour of the unsubstituted parent nucleobases is illuminating in this respect and therefore included.
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