1.Association between Hepatitis B Virus Infection and Pancreatic Cancer
Wen MA ; Derong XIE ; Wanping CAO ; Qiong YANG ; Zhimin JIANG ; Denglin CHEN ; Zhuofei BI ; Yuandong ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Clinical Oncology 2009;36(24):1388-1390
Objective: To analyze the association between hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and pancreatic cancer. Methods: Retrospective analysis was performed to explore the positive rate of serum hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) in patients with pancreatic cancer, lung cancer, diabetes mellitus and general population. Z test was used to compare the rate of HBV infection between the samples and general population. The rates among the samples were compared by Chi-square test. Results: A total of 3,701 registered patients seen in our hospital between January 1st 2003 and March 31st 2009 were collected. There were 230 pancreatic cancer patients with a positive rate of serum HBsAg of 16.1%, 1,188 lung cancer patients with a positive rate of serum HBsAg of 10.7%, and 2,283 patients with diabetes mellitus with a positive rate of serum HBsAg of 11.6%. There was no statistical significance in Z-test results between lung cancer patients and general population (Z=1.104, P=0.163), but the Z-test results between patients with diabetes mellitus and general population showed a statistical significance (Z=2.98, P=0.002). The positive rate of HBsAg was higher in pancreatic cancer patients than that in lung cancer patients (OR=1.60, 95% Cl: 1.077-2.382, r=5.487, P=0.019). Similar results were found between pancreatic cancer patients and diabetic patients (OR=1.46, 95% CI: 1.004-2.123, r=3.965, P=0.046). Conclusion: The positive rate of HBsAg is high in pancreatic cancer patients. There might be an association between HBV infection and pancreatic cancer.
2.Diagnostic strategy of primary aldosteronism based on CT scan and serum potassium level
Yu ZHANG ; Hai LI ; Guohong WEI ; Jianbin LIU ; Wanping DENG ; Xiaopei CAO ; Yanbing LI
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners 2019;18(7):668-671
One hundred and forty-five patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) admitted from 2006 to 2013 were enrolled in the study. The diagnosis of PA was confirmed by upright furosemide test and all patients met the following criteria: ① round-or oval-shaped lesion of low density with diameter>1 cm in one adrenal gland shown in contrast CT scan; ② no lesion or abnormality in contralateral adrenal gland; ③serum potassium level<3.5 mmol/L. Of 145 patients, 106 underwent total adrenalectomy, 36 partial adrenalectomy and 3 tumor enucleation. Serum potassium was (2.75±0.55) mmol/L before and (4.03±0.46) after surgery. Potassium was normalized after treatment in 141 cases (97.2%) with correction or improvement in hypertension; 4 patients (2.8%) remained hypokalemic and received spironolactone. Patients with normalized potassium were followed up for a medium period of 74 months (22—103 months), of whom 32 (22.7%) dropped off; the remaining 109 (77.3%) patients did not have hypokalemia. Multivariate linear correlation analysis showed that serum potassium level was negatively correlated with tumor diameter (r=?0.273,95% CI:?0.086—?0.564, P=0.026) and basal serum aldosterone level (r=?0.261,95% CI:?0.047— ?0.514, P=0.036). In PA patients with unilateral adrenal macroadenoma and hypokalemia, satisfactory surgical resolution can be achieved without adrenal venous sampling in majority of patients.