Disease Extent (disease + extent)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences


Selected Abstracts


Serum Concentration of IL-18 Correlates with Disease Extent in Young Children with Atopic Dermatitis

PEDIATRIC DERMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2004
Kam Lun Ellis Hon F.A.A.P.
Previous studies have suggested that IL-18 may be an inflammatory marker for atopic dermatitis (AD). The purpose of our study was to test whether the serum concentration of IL-18 is a useful inflammatory marker for assessing AD severity in young children. Nineteen AD patients with a median age of 2.2 years (interquartile range 0.7,4.6 years) were recruited. The severity of AD was clinically determined using the Scoring Atopic Dermatitis (SCORAD) index. Their SCORAD score was 23.9 (range 18.6,34.8). Serum IL-18 levels were determined by sandwich enzyme immunoassay. The median serum concentration of IL-18 was 394 pg/ml (interquartile range 204,612 pg/ml). Serum IL-18 levels correlated with SCORAD scores (r = 0.502, p = 0.029) and their extent component (r = 0.633, p = 0.004). When compared with mild disease with low SCORAD scores, the serum concentration in moderate to severe disease was significantly higher (p = 0.014). We concluded that serum IL-18 concentration is elevated in young children with AD. It may be a useful inflammatory marker that correlates with the extent component of AD in particular, and differentiates mild disease from more severe disease when used for assessing AD severity in young children. [source]


Oral mesalamine and clinical remission are associated with a decrease in the extent of long-standing ulcerative colitis

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 7 2006
Michael F. Picco MD
Abstract Objective: To compare colonoscopy alone with surveillance biopsy for the determination of anatomic extent in long-standing ulcerative colitis (UC). To assess the influences of mesalamine use and clinical disease activity on the change of histologic extent with time. Materials and Methods: Disease extent (proctosigmoiditis, left-sided colitis, or pancolitis) measured by colonoscopy and surveillance biopsy was compared among 212 consecutive patients with long-standing UC. Among the 102 patients who had 2 consecutive colonoscopies with surveillance biopsies, the following influences on change in histologic extent were determined: disease activity, mesalamine use, age at disease onset, folic acid, corticosteroid and azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine use, and time between colonoscopies. Results: Agreement between gross and microscopic findings was poor (, = 0.39). Colonoscopy underestimated and overestimated extent in 25.9% and 8.5%, respectively. Microscopic distribution between consecutive colonoscopies remained the same in 60.8%. Where distribution changed, an increase was twice as common as a decrease in extent. There was no difference in age at onset, time between colonoscopies, or disease duration among those with an increase, decrease, or no change in extent. Clinical remission and oral mesalamine were independently associated with 10.7 and 5.8 times the odds of a decrease in disease extent, respectively. Folic acid, topical mesalamine, corticosteroids, and immunomodulators did not influence change in extent. Conclusions: UC extent is best determined by surveillance biopsy. Among patients with long-standing UC, histologic extent fluctuates with time. Disease remission and oral mesalamine were independently associated with decreases in disease extent. [source]


Test Characteristics of High-Resolution Ultrasound in the Preoperative Assessment of Margins of Basal Cell and Squamous Cell Carcinoma in Patients Undergoing Mohs Micrographic Surgery

DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 1 2009
ANOKHI JAMBUSARIA-PAHLAJANI MD
BACKGROUND Noninvasive techniques to assess subclinical spread of nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) may improve surgical precision. High-resolution ultrasound has shown promise in evaluating the extent of NMSC. OBJECTIVES To determine the accuracy of high-resolution ultrasound to assess the margins of basal cell (BCC) and squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) before Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS). METHODS We enrolled 100 patients with invasive SCC or BCC. Before the first stage of MMS, a Mohs surgeon delineated the intended surgical margin. Subsequently, a trained ultrasound technologist independently evaluated disease extent using the EPISCAN I-200 to evaluate tumor extent beyond this margin. The accuracy of high-resolution ultrasound was subsequently tested by comparison with pathology from frozen sections. RESULTS The test characteristics of the high-resolution ultrasound were sensitivity=32%, specificity=88%, positive predictive value=47%, and negative predictive value=79%. Subgroup analyses demonstrated better test characteristics for tumors larger than the median (area>1.74 cm2). Qualitative analyses showed that high-resolution ultrasound was less likely to identify extension from tumors with subtle areas of extension, such as small foci of dermal invasion from infiltrative SCC and micronodular BCC. CONCLUSION High-resolution ultrasound requires additional refinements to improve the preoperative determination of tumor extent before surgical treatment of NMSC. [source]


Usefulness of fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography in patients with a residual structural abnormality after definitive treatment for squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck

HEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 12 2004
Robert E. Ware MB
Abstract Background. Residual structural abnormalities after definitive treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) are common and pose difficult management problems. The usefulness of fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) to supplement conventional evaluation with clinical and standard radiologic examination (CE) in such patients was assessed. Methods. Fifty-three eligible patients were identified with residual structural abnormalities on CE. True disease extent could be validated in 46 patients. Patients had a median potential follow-up of 55 months (range, 41,75 months) from the date of PET scan to the analysis closeout date. Results. PET had better diagnostic accuracy than CE (p = .0002) and induced management change in 21 patients (40%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 26%,54%), including avoidance of unnecessary planned surgery in 14 patients with negative PET. Appropriate management change was confirmed in 19 (95%) of 20 evaluable cases. Disease presence and extent assessment by PET were significant predictors of survival (p < .0001), whereas the extent of disease determined by CE was not. Conclusion. PET added significantly to the value of CE in restaging disease in patients with structural abnormalities after definitive treatment of HNSCC. Management decisions based on PET were appropriate in most patients. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck26: 1008,1017, 2004 [source]


Inflammatory bowel disease in young people: The case for transitional clinics

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 6 2010
J. Goodhand MRCP
Abstract Background: The incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is increasing among adolescents. In all, 25% of patients are diagnosed before the age of 16, when they are traditionally transferred from the pediatric to the adult service. Methods: We conducted a retrospective case-controlled study to characterize patients treated in a novel transitional adolescent,young adult IBD clinic. This compared disease extent, radiation exposure, therapeutic strategy, and requirement for surgery in 100 adolescents with controls from our adult IBD clinic matched for disease duration. Results: The median (range) ages for the adolescent and adult population was 19 (16,28) and 43 (24,84), with a median age at diagnosis of 15 (3,26) and 39 (13,82) respectively (P < 0.001). Crohn's disease was significantly more common in the adolescents. Disease distribution was ileocolonic in 69% of adolescents and 28% of adults, restricted to the ileum in 20% of adolescents and 47% of adults, and colonic only in 11% and 22%, respectively. Upper gastrointestinal involvement occurred in 23% of adolescents, but was not seen in adults (P < 0.01). Total ulcerative colitis was seen in 67% of adolescents and 44% of adults (P < 0.01). Contrary to previous data adolescents did not receive more ionizing radiation than adults. Requirement for immunosuppressive therapy was higher in the adolescent group (53% versus 31%, respectively, P < 0.01). Likewise, 20% of adolescents had required biological therapy compared to only 8% in the adult cohort (P < 0.05). Conclusions: Gastroenterologists should recognize that IBD is more complex when presenting in adolescence and our data support the creation of specific adolescent transitional clinics. Inflamm Bowel Dis 2009 [source]


Oral mesalamine and clinical remission are associated with a decrease in the extent of long-standing ulcerative colitis

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 7 2006
Michael F. Picco MD
Abstract Objective: To compare colonoscopy alone with surveillance biopsy for the determination of anatomic extent in long-standing ulcerative colitis (UC). To assess the influences of mesalamine use and clinical disease activity on the change of histologic extent with time. Materials and Methods: Disease extent (proctosigmoiditis, left-sided colitis, or pancolitis) measured by colonoscopy and surveillance biopsy was compared among 212 consecutive patients with long-standing UC. Among the 102 patients who had 2 consecutive colonoscopies with surveillance biopsies, the following influences on change in histologic extent were determined: disease activity, mesalamine use, age at disease onset, folic acid, corticosteroid and azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine use, and time between colonoscopies. Results: Agreement between gross and microscopic findings was poor (, = 0.39). Colonoscopy underestimated and overestimated extent in 25.9% and 8.5%, respectively. Microscopic distribution between consecutive colonoscopies remained the same in 60.8%. Where distribution changed, an increase was twice as common as a decrease in extent. There was no difference in age at onset, time between colonoscopies, or disease duration among those with an increase, decrease, or no change in extent. Clinical remission and oral mesalamine were independently associated with 10.7 and 5.8 times the odds of a decrease in disease extent, respectively. Folic acid, topical mesalamine, corticosteroids, and immunomodulators did not influence change in extent. Conclusions: UC extent is best determined by surveillance biopsy. Among patients with long-standing UC, histologic extent fluctuates with time. Disease remission and oral mesalamine were independently associated with decreases in disease extent. [source]


Inflammatory bowel disease is linked to 19p13 and associated with ICAM-1

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 3 2004
Jin Hong Low
Abstract Genome-wide scans have implicated several susceptibility loci, but linkage of 19p13 (IBD6) to Crohn's disease (CD) has not been fully replicated. We report a replication study of IBD6 in a UK Caucasian population. Two hundred eighty-four affected sibling pairs from 234 families were used for the linkage study. Linkage between IBD6 linkage and CD was replicated (LOD score = 1.59). Two candidate genes (DDXL and ICAM-1) within the IBD6 locus were examined in a case/control study with a total of 228 CD and 243 ulcerative colitis (UC) patients and 407 healthy controls. No association to either UC or CD was found in three novel intronic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in DDXL. For ICAM-1, a significant association was found between K469 homozygosity and CD overall (39.9% vs 29.4%; Pc = 0.0096) and between E469 and fistulating disease (21.8% vs 10.0%, Pc = 0.030). In the UC group, limited disease extent was associated with homozygosity of the G241 allele (82.7% vs 64.7%, Pc = 0.0040). These data support linkage for CD at 19p13 and suggest that the amino acid polymorphisms in ICAM-1 may be associated with IBD. [source]


Lesson from performing SCORADs in children with atopic dermatitis: Subjective symptoms do not correlate well with disease extent or intensity

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2006
K. L. E. Hon MBBS
Background, Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a distressing disease associated with pruritus and sleep disturbance. It is not known how well these symptoms correlate with the extent and intensity of eczematous involvement. We evaluated whether: (i) the level of sleep loss correlates with pruritus and (ii) the level of pruritus correlates with the extent or severity of AD in children according to the SCORing Atopic Dermatitis (SCORAD) index. Method, Patients with AD younger than 18 years old were recruited from the pediatric dermatology clinic of a university teaching hospital, and AD severity was evaluated by the SCORAD index. Results, One hundred and eighty-two Chinese children with AD (107 boys and 75 girls) [mean (SD) age of 9.6 (4.2) years] were recruited. Their mean (SD) overall SCORAD was 30.1 (19.2). Sleep loss was strongly correlated with pruritus (r = 0.57, P < 0.001). However, the two subjective symptoms were only weakly correlated with the objective signs (extent and intensity) of AD. The correlations between pruritus and extent and intensity were 0.42 (P < 0.001) and 0.38 (P < 0.001), respectively, and the correlations between sleep loss and extent and intensity were 0.38 (P < 0.001) and 0.34 (P < 0.001), respectively. Conclusion, We speculate that the lack of a better correlation was either because pruritus and sleep loss as reported by parents were imprecise, or that mechanisms other than disease extent or severity are responsible for the pathogenesis of these subjective symptoms. [source]


Is the Prevalence of Paget's Disease of Bone Decreasing?,

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue S2 2006
Tim Cundy
Abstract Secular trends in the severity and prevalence of Paget's disease over a 30-year period are described. Paget's disease has become less prevalent and patients are presenting later, with less severe disease than previously. These data suggest that environmental factors are important in the etiology of Paget's disease. Introduction: Data from several countries support the view that there are important secular trends in the prevalence and severity of Paget's disease. In this paper, recent trends in the epidemiology of Paget's disease are described. Materials and Methods: A database of all newly referred patients (n = 1487) with Paget's disease (1973,2002 inclusive, 30 years) was examined. Of these subjects, 56% had scintiscans. Plasma total alkaline phosphatase (total ALP) activity and disease extent on scintiscan were used as indices of severity. A radiographic prevalence survey of 1019 subjects of European origin >55 years of age in Dunedin was undertaken,,20 years after an earlier survey had shown New Zealand to be a high prevalence area. Results: The number of new referrals with Paget's disease declined sharply from 1994 onward, to one half the rate seen 20 years earlier, whereas the mean age at presentation increased by 4 years per decade (p < 0.0001). Total ALP at diagnosis, disease extent on scintiscan, and the number of bones involved were all negatively correlated with both date of birth (p < 0.0001) and year of presentation (p < 0.0001), indicating that more recently born and presenting subjects had substantially less severe bone disease. The radiographic survey showed that the current prevalence was only ,50% of that in the 1983 survey (p = 0.012). Conclusions: Although there are a number of potential biases, these data are consistent with a continued secular trend to presentation in older subjects with less extensive skeletal involvement and a declining prevalence of Paget's disease. [source]


The Interaction of Plasmodiophora brassicae and Arabidopsis thaliana: Parameters for Disease Quantification and Screening of Mutant Lines

JOURNAL OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 11-12 2002
J. Siemens
Abstract The soil-borne obligate pathogen Plasmodiophora brassicae causes clubroot disease in species of Brassicaceae, including Arabidopsis thaliana. The host,pathogen interaction was studied with respect to the age of the plant at the time point of inoculation and to different infection pressures in order to establish a standardization of infection parameters and evaluation of disease extent for A. thaliana lines. Spore number per root weight, root and shoot weight of inoculated and non-inoculated plants as well as infection rate and disease index (DI) were analysed and correlated. The disease extent of different lines was comparable as measured by the relation of root weight of inoculated and non-inoculated plants (Ri/Rni index) and the DI. Most of the 71 screened A. thaliana lines turned out to be susceptible. However, the mutant lines tu8, tu3, det1-1, and rhd3-1 showed a certain degree of tolerance under specific culture conditions. The reactions of rhd3-1 indicate that hypertrophy is a prerequisite for maturation of the pathogen. The reactions of the tu3 and tu8 mutants indicate a role of indole glucosinolates and indole-3-acetonitrile/IAA in development of clubroot disease. [source]


Age at onset of inflammatory bowel disease and the risk of surgery for non-neoplastic bowel disease

ALIMENTARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 12 2007
W. J. TREMAINE
Summary Background, There is conflicting data regarding the response to medical and surgical therapy for inflammatory bowel disease with respect to age at disease onset. Aim, To determine if the age at onset of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis is a risk factor for surgery for non-neoplastic bowel disease. Methods, This was a case,control study of patients evaluated between 1998 and 2001. Cases had undergone an initial operation for bowel disease. Controls were matched 1:1 for gender, disease subtype, date of first visit (±2 years), time from diagnosis prior to first visit (±3 years) and duration of follow-up. Association with age, disease extent, smoking history, medication use and co-morbidities vs. case/control status was assessed using multiple variable conditional logistic regression to estimate the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for undergoing surgery. Results, Among 132 Crohn's patients, older patients had lower odds for surgery (OR per 5 years, 0.86; 95% CI: 0.75,0.98). The rate of surgery for non-neoplastic bowel disease was not significantly associated with disease distribution, co-morbidities or cigarette smoking. Among 234 ulcerative colitis patients, the rate of surgery was unrelated to age, disease extent, co-morbidities or cigarette smoking, Conclusions, For Crohn's disease, but not ulcerative colitis, the risk of surgery for non-neoplastic bowel disease decreases with increasing age at diagnosis, irrespective of disease distribution and history of cigarette smoking. [source]


Squamous cell carcinoma of the temporal bone,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 6 2010
Paul W. Gidley MD
Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis: To study the survival outcomes of patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the temporal bone. A secondary purpose was to evaluate the University of Pittsburgh staging system as a predictor of survival. Study Design: Retrospective review. Methods: We performed a single-institution retrospective review of the medical charts of patients diagnosed with SCC of the temporal bone between 1945 and 2005. We identified the patients' demographic characteristics, presenting symptoms, physical examination findings, tumor histology, disease extent, treatment course, and clinical outcomes. We used the Pittsburgh staging system (2000) to determine the patients' tumor classification and disease state. We then compared the overall and disease-free survival rates between patients with early-stage versus late-stage disease. Results: We identified 124 patients with SCC of the temporal bone. Of these, 71 had incident (untreated) SCC, 26 had recurrent SCC, and 27 had persistent SCC after treatment elsewhere. The 5-year overall survival rate for patients with incident SCC was 38%, and the disease-free survival rate was 60%. The overall survival rate for patients with incident SCC was similar to that for patients with persistent disease and was significantly better than that for patients with recurrent SCC (P = .008). Patients with early-stage tumors (T1 or T2) had longer overall survival than those with late-stage tumors (T3 or T4; P = .004, log-rank). The 5-year overall survival rate was 48% for patients with early-stage disease and 28% for patients with late-stage disease. Furthermore, patients with T1 tumors had significantly longer overall survival than patients with T2 tumors (P = .039) and patients with T3 and T4 tumors (P = .0008). Overall survival (OS) and disease-free interval (DFI) were improved for T2 tumors when radiotherapy was combined with surgery (OS, P = .011; DFI, P = .02). T1 tumors did not benefit in a statistically significant way with combined therapy. T3 and T4 tumors had relatively poor outcomes in spite of combined therapy. Twenty-two patients (31%) experienced a recurrence within 1 year of treatment, whereas only one patient developed recurrence after 1 year. Lymph node metastasis, facial paralysis, or involvement of the carotid artery, jugular foramen, or infratemporal fossa were not significantly associated with overall or disease-free survival. Conclusions: Patients with recurrent SCC of the temporal bone had significantly shorter overall survival and disease-free interval than patients with incident SCC. In addition, patients with early-stage disease (T1 and T2) had significantly longer overall survival and disease-free survival than patients with late-stage tumors. Laryngoscope, 2010 [source]


Malignancies of the external auditory canal and temporal bone: A review

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 2 2002
P. Yeung
Background: Malignancies of the external auditory canal and temporal bone are uncommon. A retrospective review was conducted of a large series treated at the Prince of Wales hospital between 1974 and 1995. Methods: Retrospective review of 59 cases of ear canal and temporal bone malignancies. These were analysed according to histopathology, disease extent, surgery, margin status and survival. A TNM-type staging system was applied to 51 cases and Kaplan,Meier survival analysis applied to this group. Results: The 5-year cancer-specific survival (CSS) for the series was 54%. For stages 1, 2, 3 and 4 disease, the CSS were 90, 45, 40 and 19%, respectively. Survival was significantly higher where clear surgical margins were achieved (80 vs 35%). Conclusions: Carcinoma of the external ear canal is rare and, in Australia, is often related to recurrence of periauricular cutaneous malignancy. Surgical extirpation with clear margins provides the best survival. [source]


Advances in imaging of inflammatory breast cancer,

CANCER, Issue S11 2010
Wei Tse Yang MD
Abstract The key roles of imaging in inflammatory breast cancer using mammography, sonography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography/computed tomography to facilitate image-guided biopsy for biomarker evaluation, delineate disease extent, diagnose distant metastases, and monitor response to therapy are described in this article. Cancer 2010;116(11 suppl):2755,7. © 2010 American Cancer Society. [source]


Detection of tumor specific gene expression in bone marrow and peripheral blood from patients with small cell lung carcinoma

CANCER, Issue 4 2003
Masato Shingyoji M.D.
Abstract BACKGROUND Small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) has the propensity to grow rapidly and metastasize extensively. Detection of micro-dissemination of SCLC may have clinical relevance. For its detection, tumor-specific gene expressions were examined in peripheral blood and bone marrow aspirate from patients with SCLC. METHODS Expression of prepro-gastrin-releasing peptide (preproGRP), neuromedin B receptor (NMB-R) and gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRP-R) were examined by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in peripheral blood and bone marrow aspirate from 40 untreated patients with SCLC. Control samples consisted of peripheral blood samples from 5 patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and 20 healthy volunteers. RESULTS Positive rates of preproGRP, NMB-R, and GRP-R in bone marrow aspirate of patients with SCLC were 23% (9/40), 8% (3/40), and 10% (4/40), respectively. Those rates in peripheral blood were 11% (4/38), 5% (2/38), and 29% (11/38), respectively. Although GRP-R expression was detected in patients with NSCLC and in healthy volunteers, preproGRP and NMB-R expressions were not detected in patients with NSCLC and in healthy volunteers. All three gene expressions in bone marrow were more frequently observed in patients with bone marrow metastasis, accessed by biopsy, than in patients without. PreproGRP gene expression in bone marrow was also more frequent in patients with bone metastasis, accessed by bone scintigram, than in patients without, and was related to poorer survival. CONCLUSIONS Micro-dissemination of SCLC was detectable by RT-PCR of preproGRP and NMB-R, both specific for SCLC. These gene expressions in bone marrow may be related to disease extent and prognosis. Cancer 2003;97:1057,62. © 2003 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.11108 [source]