1.Eosinophilic Cystitis Coexisting with Superficial Bladder Cancer
Noriyasu Kawai ; Daisuke Nagata ; Akihiro Nakane
Journal of Rural Medicine 2008;4(1):38-40
Eosinophilic cystitis is a rare form of allergic cystitis. We reported a case of eosinophilic cystitis coexisting with superficial bladder cancer, which seemed to be invasive bladder cancer on imaging. We performed total cystectomy in this case. When invasive bladder cancer is diagnosed by imaging, coexistence of eosinophilic cystitis with superficial bladder cancer should be considered if biopsy does not show invasive bladder cancer.
Cancer of Bladder
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Cystitis
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Eosinophilic
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Superficial
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Diagnostic Imaging
2.Severe Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome Associated with Cisplatin-based Chemotherapy for Advanced Bladder Cancer
Taku Naiki ; Satoshi Ishikawa ; Hideyuki Kamisawa ; Toshiki Kato ; Hidetoshi Akita ; Takehiko Okamura
Journal of Rural Medicine 2007;3(2):37-40
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a heterogeneous disorder characterized by hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and renal failure that occurs predominantly in infants and young children. However, HUS in adults has also been described as a complication of various chemotherapy regimens with a relatively poor prognosis. Since cisplatin is now widely used for treatment of solid cancers, it is necessary to take into account the possibility of cisplatin-induced hemolytic uremic syndrome as a rare but potentially fatal side- effect. Herein, we describe our experience with a 67-year old woman being treated for a urothelial carcinoma of the bladder who suffered chemotherapy-induced HUS after a cisplatin-based regimen. Plasmapheresis was carried out five times; however, her serum platelets remained depressed, and she subsequently died. We conclude that there is a high risk potential for HUS in patients undergoing intensive chemotherapy for advanced-stage bladder cancer.
Hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome
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Chemotherapy-Oncologic Procedure
;
Cisplatin
;
Cancer of Bladder
;
regimen
3.Significance of apolipoprotein A1 as biomarker for early diagnosis and classification of bladder urothelial carcinoma.
Chang-ying LI ; Hong-jie LI ; Ting ZHANG ; Hong-sheng GAO ; Ji-wu CHANG ; Xiu-li MEN ; Jing WU ; Jian-min LI
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2013;31(4):266-270
OBJECTIVETo investigate the significance of apolipoprotein (Apo)-A1 in urine as a biomarker for early diagnosis and classification of bladder urothelial carcinoma (BUC).
METHODSUrine samples were divided into four groups: normal control group, benign bladder disease group, low-grade malignant BUC group, and high-grade malignant BUC group. Apo-A1, which showed significantly different expression among the four groups, was selected according to the two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) images of the four groups, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to quantify Apo-A1 in the four groups. A receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was generated, and the optimal operating points on the ROC curve were found to determine the critical concentrations of Apo-A1 for early diagnosis of BUC and differentiation of low-grade and high-grade malignant BUC. The results were verified clinically, and the specificity and sensitivity were calculated.
RESULTSThe 2-DE images showed that that the level of Apo-A1 increased from the normal control grouP to high-grade malignant BUC group. The ELISA showed that there was no significant difference in Apo-A1 level between the normal control grouP and benign bladder disease group, but the Apo-A1 level was significantly higher in the BUC groups than in the normal control grouP and benign bladder disease grouP (P < 0.01); the high-grade BUC grouP had a significantly higher Apo-A1 level than the low-grade BUC grouP (P < 0.01). The BUC patients and those without BUC could be differentiated with an Apo-A1 concentration of 18.22 ng/ml, while the low-grade and high-grade malignant BUC could be differentiated with an Apo-A1 concentration of 29.86 ng/ml. When used as a biomarker, Apo-A1 had a sensitivity of 91.6% (98/107) and a specificity of 85.7% (42/49) for diagnosis of BUC and had a sensitivity of 83.7% (41/49) and a specificity of 89.7% (52/58) for BUC classification.
CONCLUSIONApo-A1 may be a biomarker for early diagnosis and classification of BUC and shows promise for clinical application.
Aged ; Apolipoprotein A-I ; urine ; Early Detection of Cancer ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ; diagnosis ; urine
4.Application of urinary proteomics in early diagnosis of bladder urothelial carcinoma.
Hong-jie LI ; Chang-ying LI ; Ting ZHANG ; Juan-juan CHEN ; Shi-xin WANG ; Ji-wu CHANG ; Shou-fang JIANG ; Guang-ling ZHANG ; Jian-Min LI
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2013;31(4):262-265
OBJECTIVETo investigate the difference in urinary proteome between patients with bladder urothelial carcinoma (BUC) and healthy volunteers and to provide a basis for the early diagnosis of BUC.
METHODSThe urine samples from BUC patients and healthy volunteers (controls) were treated by 25% ethanol precipitation and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE), and the obtained urinary proteins were subjected to Coomassie brilliant blue staining and analysis by PDQuest 8.0 (2-DE image analysis software); the differentially expressed proteins were sequenced by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight/time-of-flight mass spectrometry and identified using the Swiss-Prot database; the differential expression of these proteins was verified by western blot.
RESULTSHigh-resolution and high-reproducibility 2-DE images were obtained from the urine samples of BUC patients and controls, with 789 ± 18 and 762 ± 14 protein spots, respectively. Compared with the control group, the BUC grouP had significantly decreased expression of 6 protein spots and significantly increased expression of 11 protein spots. The mass spectrometry revealed five proteins with increased expression in the BUC group, including fibrinogen, lactate dehydrogenase B, apolipoprotein A1, clusterin, and haptoglobin, and the results were confirmed by western blot.
CONCLUSIONThere is significant difference in urinary proteome between BUC patients and healthy volunteers; the identification of differentially expressed proteins in urine lays the foundation for identifying potential molecular markers in early diagnosis of BUC.
Aged ; Case-Control Studies ; Early Detection of Cancer ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Proteomics ; methods ; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ; diagnosis ; urine
5.Changing pattern and safety of pretransplant malignancy in kidney transplant recipients
Tae Hyun BAN ; Woo Yeong PARK ; Kyubok JIN ; Seungyeup HAN ; Byung Ha CHUNG ; Sun Cheol PARK ; Bum Soon CHOI ; Cheol Whee PARK ; Sang Seob YUN ; Yong Soo KIM ; Chul Woo YANG
Kidney Research and Clinical Practice 2019;38(4):509-516
BACKGROUND: Cancer rates are increasing not only in the general population but also in patients with end-stage renal disease. We investigated the changing pattern of pretransplant malignancy in kidney transplant recipients over 5 decades.METHODS: We reviewed 3,748 kidney transplant recipients between 1969 and 2016. We divided patients into three groups (1969–1998, 1999–2006, 2007–2016) based on the era of the cancer screening system used throughout the nation. We analyzed the incidence and pattern of pretransplant malignancy among the three groups. We also evaluated recurrent and de novo malignancy in these patients compared to patients without pretransplant malignancy.RESULTS: A total of 72 patients exhibited pretransplant malignancy (1.9%). There were no cases of pretransplant cancer until 1998, but the rate of pretransplant malignancy gradually increased to 1.1% during 1999–2006 and further increased to 4.3% thereafter. The most frequent types of pretransplant malignancy changed from the bladder, liver, and stomach cancers to thyroid cancer and renal cell carcinoma. There were no de novo cases, but there were three cases of recurrent cancer in patients with pretransplant malignancy; the recurrence rate among kidney transplant recipients with pretransplant malignancy was not significantly different from the incidence rate of de novo malignancy among kidney transplant recipients without pretransplant malignancy (4.2% vs. 6.9%, P = 0.48).CONCLUSION: The incidence of pretransplant malignancy in kidney transplantation candidates is gradually increasing, and recent increases were accompanied by changes in cancer types. Pretransplant malignancy may not be a hindrance to kidney transplantation because of the low incidence of posttransplant recurrence and de novo malignancy.
Carcinoma, Renal Cell
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Early Detection of Cancer
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Humans
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Incidence
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Kidney Failure, Chronic
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Kidney Transplantation
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Kidney
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Liver
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Recurrence
;
Stomach Neoplasms
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Thyroid Neoplasms
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Transplant Recipients
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Urinary Bladder
6.The Usefulness of 18F-FDG PET as a Cancer Screening Test.
Doo Heun KO ; Joon Young CHOI ; Yun Mi SONG ; Su Jin LEE ; Young Hwan KIM ; Kyung Han LEE ; Byung Tae KIM ; Moon Kyu LEE
Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2008;42(6):444-450
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of whole body positron emission tomography (PET) using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) for cancer screening in asymptomatic subjects. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The subjects were 1,762 men and 259 women who voluntarily underwent 18F-FDG PET for cancer screening as a part of a routine health examination. Final diagnosis was decided by other diagnostic studies, pathological results or clinical follow-up for 1 year. RESULTS: Of 2,021 subjects, 40 (2.0%) were finally proved to have cancer. Abnormal focal 18F-FDG uptake suggesting malignancy was found in 102 subjects (5.0%). Among them, 21 subjects (1.0%) were proved to have cancer. Other tests in the routine health examination could not find 9 of 21 cancers (42.9%) detected by PET. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of PET for cancer screening were 52.5%, 95.9%, 20.6%, and 99.0%, respectively. Pathologies of cancers missed on PET were adenocarcinoma (n=9; 3 colon cancers, 3 prostate cancers, 2 stomach cancers, and 1 rectal cancer), differentiated thyroid carcinoma (n=6), bronchioalveolar cell carcinoma (n=2), urinary bladder cancer (n=1), and melanoma (n=1). More than half of cancers which were not detected by PET were smaller than 1 cm in diameter. CONCLUSION: 18F-FDG PET might be useful for cancer screening in asymptomatic subjects due to its high specificity and negative predictive value and play a supplementary role to the conventional health check-up, but it could not replace due to limited sensitivity for urological cancers, small-sized tumors and some hypometaboic cancers.
Adenocarcinoma
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Colonic Neoplasms
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Early Detection of Cancer
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Female
;
Fluorodeoxyglucose F18
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Male
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Melanoma
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Positron-Emission Tomography
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Prostatic Neoplasms
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Stomach Neoplasms
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Thyroid Neoplasms
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Urinary Bladder Neoplasms
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Urologic Neoplasms
7.Synergic anti-tumour effect of B7.1 gene modified tumour vaccine combined with allicin for murine bladder tumour.
Jian WANG ; Xin-Guang LIU ; Cheng-Wei HE ; Hui-Juan HE ; Ping WU ; Ping-Ping HUANG ; Xiao-Wen CHEN ; Zhong DONG ; Xiu-Dong WU ; Li-Guo LIN ; Jian-Jun LIU
Chinese Medical Journal 2005;118(3):242-245
Animals
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B7-1 Antigen
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genetics
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Cancer Vaccines
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immunology
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Combined Modality Therapy
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Female
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Genetic Therapy
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Mice
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Mice, Inbred C3H
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Sulfinic Acids
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pharmacology
;
therapeutic use
;
T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic
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immunology
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Transfection
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Urinary Bladder Neoplasms
;
therapy
;
Vaccination
8.The clinical study for reducing bladder cancer recurrence after surgical treatment for renal pelvic carcinoma.
Miao MIAO ; Chui-ze KONG ; Zhen-hua LI ; Xian-kui LIU ; Zhi-xi SUN
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2009;47(10):728-730
OBJECTIVETo investigate the clinical methods for reducing bladder cancer recurrence after surgical treatment for renal pelvic carcinoma.
METHODSFrom October 1997 to December 2007, the data of 227 patients undergoing total nephroureterectomy for clinically localized transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis with follow-up results were analyzed retrospectively, including 126 cases of male and 101 cases of female, and the age was 34 to 78 years old. There were 2 kinds of technique used in the dissection of bladder wall circumferentially around the ureteral orifice. Technique A was dissection along the ipsilateral ureter to the bladder wall. Technique B was dissection along the vas deferens to the bladder wall circumferentially around the ipsilateral ureteral orifice and division of the lateral vesical ligament to reach the seminal vesicle. Prophylactic intravesical chemotherapy included 3 method. Method 1 was intraoperative intravesical chemotherapy and then administrated once a week, 10 times in total. Method 2 was intraoperative intravesical chemotherapy and then administrated once a week from the 4(th) week after operation, 10 times in total. Method 3 was intravesical chemotherapy was given once a week from the 4(th) week after operation, 10 times in total. The time of follow-up was 1 to 10 years with regular cystoscopy. Chi-square test and Logistic regression were used to analyzed the recurrence rate of bladder cancer.
RESULTSRecurrence rate of bladder cancer was 27.8% (63/227). The recurrence rates of bladder cancer in patients using technique A and B were 18.0% (7/39) and 12.5% (3/24), respectively (P < 0.05). The postoperative recurrence rates of bladder cancer in patients using 3 kinds of intravesical chemotherapy regimen were 17.9% (11/67), 20.8% (10/48) and 33.3% (17/51), respectively. There was significant difference between the recurrence rates of patients using method 1 and method 3 intravesical chemotherapy (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONComplete removal of the bladder mucosa circumferentially around the ureteral orifice, administration of the intraoperative intravesical chemotherapy instillation and instillation once a week may be a useful approach to reduce the recurrence of bladder cancer after operation for renal pelvic carcinoma.
Adult ; Aged ; Carcinoma, Renal Cell ; surgery ; Chemotherapy, Cancer, Regional Perfusion ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Kidney Neoplasms ; surgery ; Kidney Pelvis ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ; prevention & control ; Postoperative Care ; Retrospective Studies ; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ; prevention & control ; secondary
9.Interleukin-21 surface-modified MB49 cell vaccine for treatment of metastatic bladder in mice.
Junming PENG ; Xiaojun SHI ; Dingnan CHEN ; Zhongkun LIANG ; Kaijian LAN ; Jimin GAO ; Wanlong TAN
Journal of Southern Medical University 2012;32(6):807-811
OBJECTIVETo develop a novel vaccine by immobilizing interleukin-21 (IL-21) on the surface of MB49 cells and evaluate its effect in inducing specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and antitumor immunity in a mouse model of subcutaneous metastatic bladder cancer.
METHODSSA-IL-21 was immobilized on the surface of 30% ethanol-fixed MB49 cells to prepare the cell vaccine. C57BL/6 mice with subcutaneous implantation of MB49 bladder cancer cells were randomized into 5 groups to receive treatments with IL-21/MB49 vaccine, soluble IL-21, GFP surface-modified MB49 cells, ethanol-fixed MB49 cells, or PBS. The tumor growth and CTL were examined to assess the antitumor efficacy of the vaccine.
RESULTSIL-21 surface-modified MB49 cell vaccine significantly inhibited the tumor growth and generated a long-lasting memory response (P<0.05). At the same effector-target (E:T) ratio, the specific CTLs induced by IL-21/MB49 vaccine showed the most potent cytotoxicity against MB49 cells (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONWith the protein-anchor technique, IL-21 can be efficiently immobilized on the surface of MB49 cells to prepare IL-21/MB49 cells vaccine. The novel vaccine can maintain its biological activity and significantly enhance the cytotoxicity of CTLs against bladder cancer cells.
Amino Acid Motifs ; Animals ; Cancer Vaccines ; therapeutic use ; Cell Line, Tumor ; Female ; Immunotherapy ; Interleukins ; immunology ; Lymphocyte Activation ; Mice ; Mice, Inbred C57BL ; Neoplasm Metastasis ; Neoplasms, Experimental ; therapy ; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic ; immunology ; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ; therapy
10.Management of long-term lung cancer survivors in Korea.
Jinyoung SHIN ; Jae Ill ZO ; Jungkwon LEE
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2016;59(4):294-299
Lung cancer survivors need to undergo continuous care by primary care physicians after acute treatment. The health problems of lung cancer survivors are associated with their treatment: for example, severe pain, respiratory difficulty, poor quality of life, or pneumonitis. They also have various comorbidities, such as stroke, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or psychological problems. Surveillance of lung cancer survivors is based on an annual chest CT with routine physical examination. Incidence of second primary cancer in lung cancer survivors is reported to increase in the remnant lung, head and neck, kidney, bladder, thyroid, stomach, and breast. Therefore, lung cancer survivors need to undergo regular health examination for early detection of cancer. Smoking status, weight change, drinking behavior, and vaccination, especially influenza and pneumococcal vaccination, should be assessed whenever the patient meets a clinician. The primary care physician would be expected to take on the role of managing the health problems of Korean lung cancer survivors comprehensively, including physical and psychosocial problems, from screening to survivorship care.
Arrhythmias, Cardiac
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Breast
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Comorbidity
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Drinking Behavior
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Early Detection of Cancer
;
Head
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Humans
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Incidence
;
Influenza, Human
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Kidney
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Korea*
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Long-Term Care
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Lung Neoplasms*
;
Lung*
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Mass Screening
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Myocardial Infarction
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Neck
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Neoplasms, Second Primary
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Physical Examination
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Physicians, Primary Care
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Pneumonia
;
Primary Health Care
;
Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
;
Quality of Life
;
Smoke
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Smoking
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Stomach
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Stroke
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Survival Rate
;
Survivors*
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Thyroid Gland
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
;
Urinary Bladder
;
Vaccination