ANPAT - Artigos publicados em revistas indexadas
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing ANPAT - Artigos publicados em revistas indexadas by Issue Date
Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Clinical experience in invasive fungal infectionsPublication . Pacheco, P; Ventura, A; Branco, T; Gonçalves, L; Carvalho, CLung infections caused by invasive filamentous fungi are very rare conditions in AIDS, but must be considered in patients with profound immune suppression especially in the presence of additional risk factors, such as hematologic malignancies, corticosteroid therapy, neutropenia, and chemotherapy. The authors report a case of dual lung infection caused by Aspergillus and Mucor, which occurred in a 34-year-old AIDS patient who was treated with chemotherapy for oral plasmablastic lymphoma. The case presented clinically with low grade fever and pulmonary cavitation, which suggested tuberculosis. After extensive investigation the diagnosis of mucormycosis was established and the patient was treated sequentially with liposomal amphotericin B and posaconazole. Despite a reduction in the size of the pulmonary cavitation, improvement of the lung interstitial infiltrates and clinical recovery, the patient was submitted to cardiothoracic surgery given the aggressive behavior of this invasive fungus. Histology of the surgical specimen showed numerous hyphae with a morphologic pattern compatible with Aspergillus as well as hyphae that were suggestive of Mucor.
- Internal quality control in histotechnology: a daily and cross-cutting methodPublication . Lourenco, H; Lopes, AM; Lourenço, A; Rodrigues, AM, et al.Internal quality control (IQC) is compulsory for laboratory certification and accreditation systems. On the subject of histotechnology, the discussion/dissemination of IQC tools would facilitate IQC implementation in routine laboratory practices, and would serve as a challenge to all professionals to develop a daily internal quality control tool in histotechnology (IQCH), cross-cutting grossing, histology, cytology, histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy areas, in order to prematurely detect any deviations and, if possible, to rectify them immediately. In each laboratory area, verification steps were established (e.g. microtomy), through which deviations were identified and recorded (e.g. wrinkles/folds). In the final step, a cross-cutting classification scale is applied to samples, slides, and/or grids, according to specific area parameters and the potential interpretation impact of the recorded deviations. A qualitative/quantitative evaluation scale was obtained, which allows the classification of individual work units from Unsatisfactory/1' (presence of deviations that can influence or impede interpretation') to Very Good/5' (absence of deviations'). Any deviations observed are recorded based on a coded list. With regard to laboratory processes using samples/control tissues to validate the techniques that were conducted, an alphanumeric rating scale is applied, where the letter indicates the credibility level: from A' (max) to F' (zero).The continuous and constant use of this IQCH tool enables the identification of potential deviations and, possibly, their immediate correction. Classification of the various work units will allow the attainment of reference values that can be monitored and controlled, contributing to the improvement of individual and/or collective procedures, and promoting the involvement of every professional.
- High-risk features in potentially resectable colon cancer: a prospective MDCT-pathology agreement studyPublication . Santiago, I; Rodrigues, E; Germano, A; Costa, A; Manso, RT; Gomes, A; Leichsenring, C; Geraldes, VNeoadjuvant chemotherapy in potentially resectable high-risk Stage II and Stage III colon cancer has demonstrated promising results in the PRODIGE 22-ECKINOXE Phase II trial. Identification of adverse morphologic features, namely T3 with >5 mm extramural extension/T4 stages and/or N2, is fundamental and requires accurate noninvasive imaging. Our aim was to assess the value of optimized preoperative MDCT to stratify potentially resectable colon cancer patients for neoadjuvant therapy. METHODS: this is an observational prospective cross-sectional radiologic-pathologic agreement study. All patients with colon cancer referred to our Institution's Radiology department for preoperative MDCT staging between 01-10-2013 and 11-02-2015 underwent independent reading based on axial and multiplanar reconstruction images by 3 radiologists with 3, 6, and 20 years of experience in gastrointestinal radiology. T stage, extramural extension if T3 (≤5 mm or >5 mm), and N stage were recorded. Surgical specimens subsequently obtained underwent micro-pathologic analysis by a gastrointestinal pathologist with 9 years of experience in gastrointestinal pathology. Main outcome measures were sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, AUROC, diagnostic accuracy, and interobserver agreement of optimized MDCT, and pathologic analysis of the surgical specimen considered the reference standard. RESULTS: 74 patients [43 males; median age 73 (45-89)] were eligible. MDCT sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, AUROC, and diagnostic accuracy ranged between 42.9-76.2, 75.5-90.6, 55.2-76.2, 80.0-90.6, 0.67-0.83 and 0.76-0.86%, respectively, for the identification of T3 > 5 mm/T4 disease, with moderate interobserver agreement (0.49); and 8.3-33.3, 93.5-98.4, 20-66.7, 84.1-88.2, 0.51-0.65 and 0.80-0.86%, respectively, for the identification of N2 disease, with absent interobserver agreement (0.10). CONCLUSIONS: Specificity of MDCT in the stratification of patients for neoadjuvant therapy may be high enough to prevent overtreatment. However, it may lead to undertreatment in a meaningful proportion of patients. Observer performance may benefit from targeted training programs, given the variability and observer dependence of the results. Limitations include 4-slice MDCT equipment, time to surgery and lack of long-term outcome information based on imaging parameters per se.
- A Rare Cause of Diarrhea in the Occident: A Case of Colonic SchistosomiasisPublication . Branco, J; Santos, L; Manso, RT; Reis, J
- Susceptibility Perturbation MRI Maps Tumor Infiltration into Mesorectal Lymph Nodes.Publication . Santiago, I; Santinha, J; Ianus, A; Galzerano, A; Manso, RT, et al.Noninvasive characterization of lymph node involvement in cancer is an enduring onerous challenge. In rectal cancer, pathologic lymph node status constitutes the most important determinant of local recurrence and overall survival, and patients with involved lymph nodes may benefit from preoperative chemo and/or radiotherapy. However, knowledge of lymph node status before surgery is currently hampered by limited imaging accuracy. Here, we introduce Susceptibility-Perturbation MRI (SPI) as a novel source of contrast to map malignant infiltration into mesorectal lymph nodes. SPI involves multigradient echo (MGE) signal decays presenting a nonmonoexponential nature, which we show is sensitive to the underlying microstructure via susceptibility perturbations. Using numerical simulations, we predicted that the large cell morphology and the high cellularity of tumor within affected mesorectal lymph nodes would induce signature SPI decays. We validated this prediction in mesorectal lymph nodes excised from total mesorectal excision specimens of patients with rectal cancer using ultrahigh field (16.4 T) MRI. SPI signals distinguished benign from malignant nodal tissue, both qualitatively and quantitatively, and our histologic analyses confirmed cellularity and cell size were the likely underlying sources for the differences observed. SPI was then adapted to a clinical 1.5 T scanner, added to patients' staging protocol, and compared with conventional assessment by two expert radiologists. Nonmonoexponential decays, similar to those observed in the ex vivo study, were demonstrated, and SPI classified lymph nodes more accurately than standard high-resolution T2-weighted imaging assessment. These findings suggest this simple, yet highly informative, method can improve rectal cancer patient selection for neoadjuvant therapy. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings introduce an MRI methodology tailored to detect magnetic susceptibility perturbations induced by subtle alterations in tissue microstructure.
- Clinicopathologic predictors of renal outcomes in light chain cast nephropathy: a multicenter retrospective studyPublication . Royal, V; Leung, N; Troyanov, S; Nasr, Sh; Écotière, L; LeBlanc, R; Adam, BA; Angioi, A; Alexander, MP; Asunis, AM; Barreca, A; Bianco, PC; Cohen, C; Drosou, ME; Fatima, H; Fenoglio, R; Gougeon, F; Goujon, JM; Herrera, GA; Knebelmann, B; Lepori, N; Maletta, F; Manso, RT; Motwani, SS; Pani, A; Rabant, M; Rennke, HG; Rocatello, D; Rosenblum, F; Sanders, PW; Santos, A; Soto, K, et al.Light chain cast nephropathy (LCCN) in multiple myeloma often leads to severe and poorly reversible acute kidney injury. Severe renal impairment influences the allocation of chemotherapy and its tolerability; it also affects patient survival. Whether renal biopsy findings add to the clinical assessment in predicting renal and patient outcomes in LCCN is uncertain. We retrospectively reviewed clinical presentation, chemotherapy regimens, hematologic response, and renal and patient outcomes in 178 patients with biopsy-proven LCCN from 10 centers in Europe and North America. A detailed pathology review, including assessment of the extent of cast formation, was performed to study correlations with initial presentation and outcomes. Patients presented with a mean estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 13 ± 11 mL/min/1.73 m2, and 82% had stage 3 acute kidney injury. The mean number of casts was 3.2/mm2 in the cortex. Tubulointerstitial lesions were frequent: acute tubular injury (94%), tubulitis (82%), tubular rupture (62%), giant cell reaction (60%), and cortical and medullary inflammation (95% and 75%, respectively). Medullary inflammation, giant cell reaction, and the extent of cast formation correlated with eGFR value at LCCN diagnosis. During a median follow-up of 22 months, mean eGFR increased to 43 ± 30 mL/min/1.73 m2. Age, β2-microglobulin, best hematologic response, number of cortical casts per square millimeter, and degree of interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy (IFTA) were independently associated with a higher eGFR during follow-up. This eGFR value correlated with overall survival, independently of the hematologic response. This study shows that extent of cast formation and IFTA in LCCN predicts the quality of renal response, which, in turn, is associated with overall survival.
- The inflammation-related biomarker CXCR7 independently predicts patient outcome after radical prostatectomyPublication . Santos, PB; Lobo, J; Félix, A; Silva, F; Manso, RT; Costa, J, et al.INTRODUCTION: The influence of inflammation on prostate tumor carcinogenesis is currently much better known than with its role in prostate cancer (CaP) progression. We evaluated the prognostic value of epigenetic (HDAC1, HDAC4, H3Ac) and inflammation-related (CXCR4, CXCR7, CXCL12) biomarkers immunoexpression, in radical prostatectomy specimens, from 2 cohorts of CaP patients with long term follow-up. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded radical prostatectomy specimens were obtained from the pathology archives of Prof. Doutor Fernando Fonseca Hospital, in Amadora, Portugal and Portuguese Oncology Institute of Porto, in Porto, Portugal, and tissue microarrays were assembled. It was achieved a set of 234 patients submitted to radical retropubic prostatectomy between January 2000 and December 2005. Immunohistochemistry was used for evaluation of protein expression of epigenetic and inflammation-related markers. Nuclear staining was assessed using digital image analysis. Study outcomes included disease-specific survival and disease-free survival (DFS). Statistical analysis was tabulated using SPSS version 23.0. Hazard ratios (HRs) and survival curves were estimated using Cox-regression and Kaplan-Meyer models, respectively. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05. RESULTS: Complete follow-up data was available for 234 patients and median follow-up time was 164 [11-218] months. Patients with higher CXCR4 immunoexpression experienced significantly worse disease-specific survival compared to patients with low expression (HR = 1.016, 95% CI: 1.002-1.031). The same happened with CXCL12 (HR = 0.546 95% CI: 0.322-0.926) and H3Ac (HR = 1.015, 95% CI: 1.001c1.029). In what concerns to DFS, patients with higher expression of CXCR4 and CXCR7 were significantly more prone to experience disease recurrence (HR = 1.003, 95% CI: 1.000-1.005 and HR = 1.111, 95% CI:1.032-1.196, respectively). When adjusted to pTStage and WHO Grade Groups, CXCR7 maintained independent impact on DFS (HR = 1.119, 95% CI: 1.032-1.214). CONCLUSIONS: The interplay between inflammation and epigenetics and its impact in CaP outcome deserves further studies in the future. CXCR7 shows an independent predictor for worse DFS after radical prostatectomy, and could provide important prognostic information for patient management after radical prostatectomy.