BACKGROUND Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in men and the second most common in women worldwide. Almost a third of the patients has or will develop liver metastases. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy(NAC) has...BACKGROUND Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in men and the second most common in women worldwide. Almost a third of the patients has or will develop liver metastases. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy(NAC) has recently become nearly systematic prior to surgery of colorectal livers metastases(CRLMs). The response to NAC is evaluated by radiological imaging according to morphological criteria.More recently, the response to NAC has been evaluated based on histological criteria of the resected specimen. The most often used score is the tumor regression grade(TRG), which considers the necrosis, fibrosis, and number of viable tumor cells.AIM To analyze the predictive factors of the histological response, according to the TRG, on CRLM surgery performed after NAC.METHODSFrom January 2006 to December 2013, 150 patients who had underwent surgery for CRLMs after NAC were included. The patients were separated into two groups based on their histological response, according to Rubbia-Brandt TRG.Based on their TRG, each patient was either assigned to the responder(R) group(TRG 1, 2, and 3) or to the non-responder(NR) group(TRG 4 and 5). All of the histology slides were re-evaluated in a blind manner by the same specialized pathologist. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed.RESULTS Seventy-four patients were classified as responders and 76 as non-responders.The postoperative mortality rate was 0.7%, with a complication rate of 38%.Multivariate analysis identified five predictive factors of histological response.Three were predictive of non-response: More than seven NAC sessions, the absence of a radiological response after NAC, and a repeat hepatectomy(P <0.005). Two were predictive of a good response: A rectal origin of the primary tumor and a liver-first strategy(P < 0.005). The overall survival was 57% at 3 yr and 36% at 5 yr. The disease-free survival rates were 14% at 3 yr and 11% at 5 yr.The factors contributing to a poor prognosis for disease-free survival were: No histological response after NAC, largest metastasis > 3 cm, more than three preoperative metastases, R1 resection, and the use of a targeted therapy with NAC(P < 0.005).CONCLUSION A non-radiological response and a number of NAC sessions > 7 are the two most pertinent predictive factors of non-histological response(TRG 4 or 5).展开更多
The ideal management of a child presenting a first episode of febrile urinary tract infection is still under debate.In the recent guidelines for the diagnosis and management of urinary tract infections (UTI) in childr...The ideal management of a child presenting a first episode of febrile urinary tract infection is still under debate.In the recent guidelines for the diagnosis and management of urinary tract infections (UTI) in children,the American Association of Pediatrics recommend performing a post-UTI sonography,and if there are abnormal findings,a voiding cystourethrogram [1].This change derives from the understanding that we should be avoiding renal damage rather more than diagnosing reflux,since both surgery and antibiotic prophylaxis are progressively being abandoned for most cases of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) [2,3].The most significant event which will bring a child to active management is recurrence of UTI [4,5].It seems therefore more clinically relevant to differentiate between children who will suffer recurrent episodes of UTI and those who will not,rather than to simply identify which children have VUR.We therefore aimed to evaluate if DMSA nuclear scan could reliably identify which children were at risk of presenting a second febrile UTI.展开更多
文摘BACKGROUND Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in men and the second most common in women worldwide. Almost a third of the patients has or will develop liver metastases. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy(NAC) has recently become nearly systematic prior to surgery of colorectal livers metastases(CRLMs). The response to NAC is evaluated by radiological imaging according to morphological criteria.More recently, the response to NAC has been evaluated based on histological criteria of the resected specimen. The most often used score is the tumor regression grade(TRG), which considers the necrosis, fibrosis, and number of viable tumor cells.AIM To analyze the predictive factors of the histological response, according to the TRG, on CRLM surgery performed after NAC.METHODSFrom January 2006 to December 2013, 150 patients who had underwent surgery for CRLMs after NAC were included. The patients were separated into two groups based on their histological response, according to Rubbia-Brandt TRG.Based on their TRG, each patient was either assigned to the responder(R) group(TRG 1, 2, and 3) or to the non-responder(NR) group(TRG 4 and 5). All of the histology slides were re-evaluated in a blind manner by the same specialized pathologist. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed.RESULTS Seventy-four patients were classified as responders and 76 as non-responders.The postoperative mortality rate was 0.7%, with a complication rate of 38%.Multivariate analysis identified five predictive factors of histological response.Three were predictive of non-response: More than seven NAC sessions, the absence of a radiological response after NAC, and a repeat hepatectomy(P <0.005). Two were predictive of a good response: A rectal origin of the primary tumor and a liver-first strategy(P < 0.005). The overall survival was 57% at 3 yr and 36% at 5 yr. The disease-free survival rates were 14% at 3 yr and 11% at 5 yr.The factors contributing to a poor prognosis for disease-free survival were: No histological response after NAC, largest metastasis > 3 cm, more than three preoperative metastases, R1 resection, and the use of a targeted therapy with NAC(P < 0.005).CONCLUSION A non-radiological response and a number of NAC sessions > 7 are the two most pertinent predictive factors of non-histological response(TRG 4 or 5).
文摘The ideal management of a child presenting a first episode of febrile urinary tract infection is still under debate.In the recent guidelines for the diagnosis and management of urinary tract infections (UTI) in children,the American Association of Pediatrics recommend performing a post-UTI sonography,and if there are abnormal findings,a voiding cystourethrogram [1].This change derives from the understanding that we should be avoiding renal damage rather more than diagnosing reflux,since both surgery and antibiotic prophylaxis are progressively being abandoned for most cases of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) [2,3].The most significant event which will bring a child to active management is recurrence of UTI [4,5].It seems therefore more clinically relevant to differentiate between children who will suffer recurrent episodes of UTI and those who will not,rather than to simply identify which children have VUR.We therefore aimed to evaluate if DMSA nuclear scan could reliably identify which children were at risk of presenting a second febrile UTI.