In the present study we analyzed the prognostic significance of several clinical, hematological, and histological parameters recorded at diagnosis in a consecutive series of 72 patients with primary myelofibrosis (PMF). Univariate analysis showed that the most significant indicators of poor survival were the following: age greater than 60, splenomegaly, anemia (hemoglobin > 10 g/dl), leukopenia (WBC < 4 x 10(9)/l or leukocytosis > 14 x 10(9)/l), and any of these histological features: adipose tissue and megakaryocyte reduction, prominent osteoblastic rims along the trabecular bone, presence of peritrabecular megakaryocytes (Mk), absence of normal or giant Mk. The multivariate analysis showed that only the level of hemoglobin and the presence of both normal Mk and fever independently influenced the prognosis. These parameters were used to set up a prognostic scoring system, allowing a feasible prognosis to be made for each patient at the time of diagnosis and identifying those patients in urgent need of new therapeutic approaches.
Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV) tests are crucial diagnostic tools for the prevention of neoplastic lesions of the uterine cervix. However most commercial methods are designed to detect high-risk (HR) HPV types and a limited selection of low-risk ones, thus missing a fair number of intermediate/low-risk types. As a result, many HPV infections remain undiagnosed, generating distrust in virological diagnosis among gynaecologists, who continue to rely preferentially on cytological and colposcopic findings.
Vertebral hemangioma is a benign vascular lesion that may onset with neurologic symptoms due to spinal cord compression by epidural extension. Surgical procedure, embolization and radiotherapy are the gold standard for the treatment of this disease. We present a case of a 84 years old woman admitted at our department with worsening paraparesis and urinary retention. Her magnetic resonance images (MRI) showed a lesion involving both anterior and posterior vertebral element of D5, with extension into epidural space and spinal cord compression. The patient was operated for laminectomy and epidural lesion removal. Histological examination confirmed the diagnosis of cavernous hemangioma.
This study was conducted on fine-needle aspirates of well differentiated follicular neoplasms of the thyroid. A 'decision tree' classification based on the percentage of nucleolated nuclei, percentage of nuclei with two or more nucleoli and mean major nuclear diameter was adopted. We observed that the reproducibility and the validity of the follicular adenoma vs follicular carcinoma discrimination are greater than in the subjective evaluation. Moreover, similar classification results were obtained when measurements were performed either with a fully automated image analysis system or with semiautomatic or manual instrumentation. As for reproducibility of the inter-instrument comparisons, the k statistic values ranged from 0.85 to 1.00 (mean value 0.90, that is, an 'almost perfect' degree of agreement); in the subjective evaluations, the inter-observer comparisons showed values ranging from 0.20 to 0.56 (mean value 0.37, that is, 'fair'). In the decision tree classification, feature value thresholds were selected in order to have specificity of 100% and the predictive value of a positive result (carcinoma) of 100%; accuracy was 87% (range 86-89%), sensitivity 74% (71-79%), the predictive value of a negative result (adenoma) 79% (78-82%). In the subjective evaluation the values were as follows: accuracy 67% (64-71%), sensitivity 57% (50-64%), specificity 77% (71-79%), predictive value of a negative result (adenoma) 64% (61-69%), predictive value of a positive result (carcinoma) 71% (67-75%). The conclusion is that, by using a routine microscope equipped with a micrometer, the preoperative diagnosis of follicular carcinoma from smears can be formulated with a high degree of certainty.
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.