(1) No increase in the incidence of GI NHL was found over a 9-year observation period; (2) nonrandom spatial distribution of new GI NHL cases was observed; (3) factors that significantly increased the risk of death in gastric cases were presence of B symptoms (RR = 3.3), clinical stage is more than II1 (RR = 3.0), age more than 72 years (RR = 2.4), and elevated serum lactate dehydrogenase (s-LDH) level (RR = 2.0); and factors that increased the risk of death in intestinal cases were presence of B symptoms (RR = 3.2), age more than 58 years (RR = 2.8), and clinical stage more than I (RR = 2.1); (4) factors that significantly increased the risk of relapse in gastric cases were male sex and no radiotherapy in primary treatment; and in intestinal cases were T-cell phenotype and no surgery in primary treatment; (5) surgical staging, as opposed to thorough noninvasive staging, did not improve staging accuracy and final outcome in localized gastric NHL.
Reliable and accurate assessment of liver histopathology in patients with chronic hepatitis C is important for decision regarding treatment and for evaluation of therapy. However, little data on interobserver variation have been published. In this study, five specialist histopathologists evaluated 46 liver biopsies from 20 patients treated with interferon-alpha. Knodell's and Ishak's scoring systems, De Groote's classification and a four level general necro-inflammatory activity score (GNAS) were applied. Besides kappa statistics, slide by slide analysis was performed. We defined an acceptable slide by slide agreement as eight of ten observer pairs agreed on 80% of the slides. The best agreement was seen for Knodell's and Ishak's fibrosis score, De Groote's classification and GNAS (mean weighted kappa (kappa(w)) = 0.49, 0.51, 0.50 and 0.44, respectively). By condensing data from Knodell's and Ishak's scores to presence or absence of cirrhosis and piecemeal necrosis respectively, concordance was substantial concerning cirrhosis (mean kappa = 0.69 and 0.72, respectively) but only moderate concerning piecemeal necrosis (mean kappa = 0.40 and 0.39, respectively). Slide by slide analysis showed the highest agreement on Knodell's fibrosis score and GNAS; only one point of difference in score was to be accepted to obtain 'eight of ten' agreement. In contrast, five points of difference were necessary to accept in order to reach the same agreement for Knodell's total activity score. Moreover, in serial biopsies the GNAS was sufficient to detect changes in disease activity following treatment. Thus, a simple scoring system with four category scales was reproducible and sufficient for detection of therapy induced changes.
Smoking cessation significantly reduces the urinary excretion rate of 8-oxodG, giving direct and controlled evidence that cigarette smoking causes an increased rate of oxidative DNA modification. This could represent a mechanism by which tobacco smoke is carcinogenic.
Background: Patients undergoing major surgery are at risk of complications, so-called serious adverse events (SAE). Continuous monitoring may detect deteriorating patients by recording abnormal vital signs. We aimed to assess the association between abnormal vital signs inspired by Early Warning Score thresholds and subsequent SAEs in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery.Methods: Prospective observational cohort study continuously monitoring heart rate, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation, and blood pressure for up to 96 h in 500 postoperative patients admitted to the general ward. Exposure variables were vital sign abnormalities, primary outcome was any serious adverse event occurring within 30 postoperative days. The primary analysis investigated the association between exposure variables per 24 h and subsequent serious adverse events.Results: Serious adverse events occurred in 37% of patients, with 38% occurring during monitoring. Among patients with SAE during monitoring, the median duration of vital sign abnormalities was 272 min (IQR 110-447), compared to 259 min (IQR 153-394) in patients with SAE after monitoring and 261 min (IQR 132-468) in the patients without any SAE (p = .62 for all three group comparisons). Episodes of heart rate ≥110 bpm occurred in 16%, 7.1%, and 3.9% of patients in the time before SAE during monitoring, after monitoring, and without SAE, respectively (p < .002). Patients withThis is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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