A randomized, controlled clinical trial established the efficacy and safety of short-term use of hydroxyurea in adult sickle cell anemia. To examine the risks and benefits of long-term hydroxyurea usage, patients in this trial were followed for 17.5 years during which they could start or stop hydroxyurea. The purpose of this follow-up was to search for adverse outcomes and estimate mortality. For each outcome and for mortality, exact 95% confidence intervals were calculated, or tests were conducted at a 5 0.05 level (P-value <0.05 for statistical significance). Although the death rate in the overall study cohort was high (43.1%; 4.4 per 100 person-years), mortality was reduced in individuals with long-term exposure to hydroxyurea. Survival curves demonstrated a significant reduction in deaths with long-term exposure. Twenty-four percent of deaths were due to pulmonary complications; 87.1% occurred in patients who never took hydroxyurea or took it for <5 years. Stroke, organ dysfunction, infection, and malignancy were similar in all groups. Our results, while no longer the product of a randomized study because of the ethical concerns of withholding an efficacious treatment, suggest that long-term use of hydroxyurea is safe and might decrease mortality. Am. J. Hematol. 85:403-408, 2010. V
Background. The authors undertook this study to define the clinical and histologic characteristics of spindle and giant cell carcinomas of the lung and the survival and prognostic features of these tumors.
Methods. Seventy‐eight cases of pleomorphic (spindle and/or giant cell) carcinoma of the lung were studied by light microscopy and immunohistochemistry to establish clinical, gross, and histologic parameters. Follow‐up information was obtained from contributing physicians and analyzed by statistical means to determine prognostically significant parameters.
Results. The patient population consisted of 57 men and 21 women (male to female ratio, 2.7 to 1) between the ages of 35 and 83 years (mean, 62 years). Clinically, 58 patients (80%) presented with symptoms including thoracic pain, cough, and hemoptysis, whereas 14 (18%) were asymptomatic. At the time of diagnosis, 41% of the patients had clinical Stage I lesions, 6% Stage II lesions, 39% Stage III lesions, and 12% Stage IV lesions. Histologically, foci of squamous cell carcinoma were present in 8% of the tumors, large cell carcinoma in 25%, and adenocarcinoma in 45%. The remaining 22% of neoplasms were completely spindle and/or giant cell carcinomas. Spindle and giant cell carcinomas were found together in 38% of the patients. In the 69 patients for whom follow‐up information was obtained, 53 (77%) died within 7 days to 6 years after diagnosis, with a 23‐month mean survival (median, 10 months) (Kaplan‐Meier method). There was a significant shortening of survival for patients with tumor size greater than 5 cm, clinical stage greater than 1, and lymph node involvement. The presence of nodal metastases was the most significant single prognostic factor, whereas the presence of squamous or adenocarcinomatous differentiation did not have an impact on length of survival.
Conclusions. The frequency with which spindle and giant cell carcinomas are found together, their frequent association with other histologic subtypes of lung carcinoma, and the similar clinicopathologic features of these tumors suggest that they are best regarded as one type of lung cancer called pleomorphic carcinoma. Cancer 1994; 73:2936–45.
Serum PSA concentrations can be used to discriminate between men with prostate cancer and those without it among both blacks and whites. Over 40 percent of cases of prostate cancer in black men would not be detected by tests using traditional age-specific reference ranges, which maintain specificity at 95 percent. In this high-risk population, the alternative approach--maintaining sensitivity at 95 percent--may be used with acceptable decrements in specificity.
Background. The current understanding of appendiceal epithelial tumors is based on series composed of relatively small numbers of patients and on case reports. The aim of this study was to perform clinicopathologic correlation, particularly concerning prognosis, on a relatively large series of patients with epithelial tumors and tumor‐like lesions of the human vermiform appendix.
Methods. One hundred eighty‐four cases of simple mucoceles, hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, carcinomas, and mucinous tumors of uncertain malignant potential (UMP) were reviewed. Retrospective follow‐up data were obtained in carcinoma and UMP tumor cases.
Results. Most neoplasms were of the mucinous type characteristic of the appendix, but a small fraction were nonmucinous and resembled neoplasms typical of the spectrum encountered in the colorectum. Both benign and malignant conditions in some cases showed acellular mucin dissecting the appendiceal wall and mucin outside the appendix. Immunostains were sometimes helpful in identifying epithelial cells within mucus, but hematoxylin and eosin and mucin stains were adequate in most cases. Two factors were significantly associated with survival by multivariate analysis: the presence of mucin outside the right lower quadrant of the abdomen and the presence of epithelial cells in the peritoneal cavity outside the appendix.
Conclusions. The distribution of mucin within the abdomen and the presence of cells outside the visceral peritoneum of the appendix are important prognostic factors that should be recorded in these neoplasms. Tumors designated as UMP lesions behave in a benign or low grade fashion. Cancer 1995;75:757‐68.
Adenosine-augmented MDCT myocardial perfusion imaging provides semiquantitative measurements of myocardial perfusion during first-pass MDCT imaging in a canine model of LAD stenosis.
This trial provides evidence of the efficacy of paromomycin-gentamicin and paromomycin alone for ulcerative L. major disease. (Funded by the Department of the Army; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00606580.).
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.