This study was conducted to seek the frequency in Puerto Rico of squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix among wives of 889 men with the diagnosis of epidermoid carcinoma of the penis, and the sequence and intervals between the 2 diagnoses in comparison with a matched group. The wives of the penile carcinoma group developed 8 cases of epidermoid carcinoma of the cervix uteri in contrast with none among the control wives. Carcinomas of the cervix were diagnosed later and in earlier stage than the penile carcinomas.
The distribution of cancer of the anatomical sub-sites cf the colon and rectctm in Alameda County (California), Bombay. Denmark, Kingston and St .4ndrew (Jamaica), Miyagi Prefkture (Japan), New Zealand, Norway, Puerto Rico, Saskatchewan (Canada)
Bacterial infections may complicate the course of COVID-19 patients. The rate and predictors of bacterial infections were examined in patients consecutively admitted with COVID-19 at one tertiary hospital in Madrid between March 1st and April 30th, 2020. Among 1594 hospitalized patients with COVID-19, 135 (8.5%) experienced bacterial infectious events, distributed as follows: urinary tract infections (32.6%), bacteremia (31.9%), pneumonia (31.8%), intra-abdominal infections (6.7%) and skin and soft tissue infections (6.7%). Independent predictors of bacterial infections were older age, neurological disease, prior immunosuppression and ICU admission (p < 0.05). Patients with bacterial infections who more frequently received steroids and tocilizumab, progressed to lower Sap02/FiO2 ratios, and experienced more severe ARDS (p < 0.001). The mortality rate was significantly higher in patients with bacterial infections as compared to the rest (25% vs 6.7%, respectively; p < 0.001). In multivariate analyses, older age, prior neurological or kidney disease, immunosuppression and ARDS severity were associated with an increased mortality (p < 0.05) while bacterial infections were not. Conversely, the use of steroids or steroids plus tocilizumab did not confer a higher risk of bacterial infections and improved survival rates. Bacterial infections occurred in 8.5% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 during the first wave of the pandemic. They were not independently associated with increased mortality rates. Baseline COVID-19 severity rather than the incidence of bacterial infections seems to contribute to mortality. When indicated, the use of steroids or steroids plus tocilizumab might improve survival in this population.
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) includes a heterogeneous group of biliary cancers with poor prognosis. Several conditions, such as primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), are risk factors. Noninvasive differential diagnosis between intrahepatic CCA and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is sometimes difficult. Accurate noninvasive biomarkers for PSC, CCA, and HCC are not available. In the search for novel biomarkers, serum extracellular vesicles (EV) were isolated from CCA (n 5 43), PSC (n 5 30), or HCC (n 5 29) patients and healthy individuals (control, n 5 32); and their protein content was characterized. By using nanoparticle tracking analysis, serum EV concentration was found to be higher in HCC than in all the other groups. Round morphology (by transmission electron microscopy), size (180 nm diameter by nanoparticle tracking analysis), and markers (clusters of differentiation 9, 63, and 81 by immunoblot) indicated that most serum EV were exosomes. Proteome profiles (by mass spectrometry) revealed multiple differentially expressed proteins among groups. Several of these proteins showed high diagnostic values with maximum area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.878 for CCA versus control, 0.905 for CCA stage I-II versus control, 0.789 for PSC versus control, 0.806 for noncirhottic PSC versus control, 0.796 for CCA versus PSC, 0.956 for CCA stage I-II versus PSC, 0.904 for HCC versus control, and 0.894 for intrahepatic CCA versus HCC. Proteomic analysis of EV derived from CCA human cells in vitro revealed higher abundance of oncogenic proteins compared to EV released by normal human cholangiocytes. Orthotopic implant of CCA human cells in the liver of immunodeficient mice resulted in the release to serum of EV containing some similar human oncogenic proteins. Conclusion: Proteomic signatures found in serum EV of CCA, PSC, and HCC patients show potential usefulness as diagnostic tools. (HEPATOLOGY 2017;66:1125-1143).
From 1949 to 1951, a controlled trial of BCG vaccinations was conducted in Puerto Rico. The 191,827 children, 1-18 years of age, initially enrolled in the study were skin-tested with tuberculin to determine their eligibility for vaccination. A total of 82,269 children were classified as reactors and not vaccinated. Of the 109, 558 nonreactors, 31,586 refused vaccination, 50,634 were vaccinated with BCG, and 27,338 were left unvaccinated as controls. We ascertained the incidence of cancer over an average follow-up period of 23.3 years in the latter two groups using the Puerto Rico Central Cancer Registry. By the end of December 1973, a total of 77 cancers had been diagnosed among the controls and 150 among the vaccinees. The overall incidence of cancer among the two groups was similar. Although a number of differences existed between the vaccinee group and the controls in regard to the incidence of cancer at various "sites", none of these differences was statistically significant. However, when cases of lymphosarcoma and Hodgkin's disease were combined for analysis, a statistically significant excess of cases occurred among the vaccinees. We concluded that BCG vaccination had no protective effect on the subsequent development of cancer in this population. The slight excess of cases of lymphosarcoma and Hodgkin's disease among the vaccinees raised the possibility that BCG may have had an adverse effect.
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