As the finalization of the hydrogen experiment towards the deuterium phase, the exploration of the best performance of the hydrogen plasma was intensively performed in the Large Helical Device (LHD). High ion and electron temperatures, Ti, Te, of more than 6 keV were simultaneously achieved by superimposing the high power electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECH) on the neutral beam injection (NBI) heated plasma. Although flattening of the ion temperature profile in the core region was observed during the discharges, one could avoid the degradation by increasing the electron density. Another key parameter to present plasma performance is an averaged beta value . The high regime around 4 % was extended to an order of magnitude lower than the earlier collisional regime. Impurity behaviour in hydrogen discharges with NBI heating was also classified with the wide range of edge plasma parameters. Existence of no impurity accumulation regime where the high performance plasma is maintained with high power heating > 10 MW was identified. Wide parameter scan experiments suggest that the toroidal rotation and the turbulence are the candidates for expelling impurities from the core region.
Second hepatectomy is beneficial for patients without any risk factors. Before second hepatectomy, chemotherapy should be considered for patients with any of these risk factors, especially with two or three factors, in the adjuvant or neoadjuvant setting to prolong survival. These results need to be confirmed and validated in another data set or future prospective trial according to the scoring scheme we outline.
Cholelithiasis was confirmed to be associated with the risk of biliary tract cancer, both gallbladder and extrahepatic bile duct cancer. Obesity may increase the risk of extrahepatic bile duct cancer only, independent of cholelithiasis.
Aminotransferase level is presumed to be a marker of hepatic inflammation, but uncertainty remains whether elevated aminotransferase levels are associated with an increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We evaluated the incidence of HCC by aminotransferase level in 19 812 middle-aged and older individuals with and without hepatitis virus infection from a large-scale population-based cohort study (JPHC Study cohort II) in Japan. Hepatitis virus infection was identified at baseline in 1236 participants, namely 737 (3.7%) with hepatitis C virus, 479 (2.4%) with hepatitis B virus, and 20 (0.1%) with both. By the end of follow-up, a total of 109 newly arising HCC cases were diagnosed (71 men, 38 women), of which 87 (79.8%) had evidence of viral etiology. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) was concentration-dependently associated with an increased risk of HCC in both virus-positive and virus-negative participants. Compared with virus-negative participants with ALT levels of less than 30 IU/l, a significant increase in the risk of HCC was observed in virus-negative participants with an ALT level greater than 30 IU/l, and in virus-positive participants with an ALT less than 30 IU/l, 30-69 IU/l, and > or =70 IU/l [Hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 9.4 (3.9-22.3), 15.2 (6.1-37.6), 180.5 (89.4-364.2), 454.2 (221.5-931.2), respectively; P for trend <0.001]. In conclusion, our findings suggest that elevated ALT levels are strongly associated with the incidence of HCC regardless of hepatitis virus positivity. This finding indicates that ALT level is a good independent determinant of the need for intervention. Clinical application of these findings may help decrease HCC-associated mortality in hepatitis virus-endemic regions.
ASR is beneficial to selected patients in terms of survival. To select patients, evaluation of the resection margin, the local disease-free interval, pain extent, and macroscopic growth pattern is important. To improve survival, adjuvant treatment should be aimed at local and lung recurrences.
Profiles of risk factors for local and distant recurrences after ISR are different. With local recurrence, the resection margin, focal dedifferentiation, and serum CA 19-9 level are important. For distant recurrence, the lymph node status, histologic grade, and tumor location need to be taken into account.
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