1.Papillary lesions of the breast.
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2013;42(11):721-726
Biopsy, Needle
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Breast
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pathology
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Breast Neoplasms
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classification
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metabolism
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pathology
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Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast
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metabolism
;
pathology
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Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating
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metabolism
;
pathology
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Carcinoma, Papillary
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metabolism
;
pathology
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Female
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Humans
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Hyperplasia
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Keratin-14
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metabolism
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Keratin-5
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metabolism
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Keratin-6
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metabolism
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Membrane Proteins
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metabolism
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Papilloma, Intraductal
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metabolism
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pathology
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Receptors, Estrogen
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metabolism
3.Electrocardiographic features in SCN5A mutation‑positive patients with Brugada and early repolarization syndromes: a systematic review and meta‑analysis
Danny RADFORD ; Oscar Hou In CHOU ; George BAZOUKIS ; Konstantinos LETSAS ; Tong LIU ; Gary TSE ; Sharen LEE
International Journal of Arrhythmia 2022;23(3):16-
Background:
Early repolarization syndrome (ERS) and Brugada syndrome (BrS) are both J-wave syndromes. Both can involve mutations in the SCN5A gene but may exhibit distinct electrocardiographic (ECG) differences. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to investigate possible differences in ECG markers between SCN5A-positive patients with ERS and BrS.
Methods:
PubMed and Embase were searched from their inception to 20 October 2021 for human studies containing the search terms “SCN5A” and “variant” and “early repolarization” or “Brugada”, with no language restrictions.Continuous variables were expressed as mean±standard deviation. PR interval, QRS duration, QTc and heart rate from the included studies were pooled to calculate a mean for each variable amongst BrS and ERS patients. A two-tailed Student’s t test was then performed to for comparisons.
Results:
A total of 328 studies were identified. After full-text screening, 12 studies met our inclusion criteria and were included in this present study. One hundred and four ERS patients (mean age 30.86±14.45) and 2000 BrS patients (mean age 36.17±11.39) were studied. Our meta-analysis found that ERS patients had shorter QRS duration (90.40±9.97 vs. 114.79±20.10, P = 0.0001) and shorter corrected QT intervals (QTc) with borderline significance (393.63±40.04 vs. 416.82±37.43, P = 0.052). By contrast, no significant differences in baseline heart rate (65.15±18.78 vs. 76.06±18.78, P = 0.068) or PR intervals (197.40±34.69 vs. 191.88±35.08, P = 0.621) were observed between ERS and BrS patients.
Conclusion
BrS patients with positive SCN5A mutations exhibited prolonged QRS, indicating conduction abnormalities, whereas ERS patients with positive SCN5A mutations showed normal QRS. By contrast, whilst QTc intervals were longer in BrS than in ERS SCN5A positive patients, they were within normal limits. Further studies are needed to examine the implications of these findings for arrhythmic risk stratification.
4.Clinical significance, challenges and limitations in using artificial intelligence for electrocardiography‑based diagnosis
Cheuk To CHUNG ; Sharen LEE ; Emma KING ; Tong LIU ; Antonis A. ARMOUNDAS ; George BAZOUKIS ; Gary TSE
International Journal of Arrhythmia 2022;23(4):24-
Cardiovascular diseases are one of the leading global causes of mortality. Currently, clinicians rely on their own analyses or automated analyses of the electrocardiogram (ECG) to obtain a diagnosis. However, both approaches can only include a finite number of predictors and are unable to execute complex analyses. Artificial intelligence (AI) has enabled the introduction of machine and deep learning algorithms to compensate for the existing limitations of cur‑ rent ECG analysis methods, with promising results. However, it should be prudent to recognize that these algorithms also associated with their own unique set of challenges and limitations, such as professional liability, systematic bias, surveillance, cybersecurity, as well as technical and logistical challenges. This review aims to increase familiarity with and awareness of AI algorithms used in ECG diagnosis, and to ultimately inform the interested stakeholders on their potential utility in addressing present clinical challenges.
5.The Clinical Value of PELP1 for Breast Cancer: A Comparison with Multiple Cancers and Analysis in Breast Cancer Subtypes
Xingen WANG ; Julia YS TSANG ; Michelle A LEE ; Yun Bi NI ; Joanna H TONG ; Siu Ki CHAN ; Sai Yin CHEUNG ; Ka Fai TO ; Gary M TSE
Cancer Research and Treatment 2019;51(2):706-717
PURPOSE: Proline, glutamic acid, and leucine-rich protein 1 (PELP1), a novel nuclear receptor (NR) co-regulator, is highly expressed in breast cancer. We investigated its expression in breast cancer subtypes, in comparison with other breast markers as well as cancers from different sites. Its prognostic relevance with different subtypes and other NR expression was also examined in breast cancers. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Immunohistochemical analysis was performed on totally 1,944 cancers from six different organs. RESULTS: PELP1 expression rate was the highest in breast cancers (70.5%) among different cancers. Compared to GATA3, mammaglobin and gross cystic disease fluid protein 15, PELP1 was less sensitive than GATA3 for luminal cancers, but was the most sensitive for non-luminal cancers. PELP1 has low expression rate (<20%) in colorectal cancers, gastric cancers and renal cell carcinomas, but higher in lung cancers (49.1%) and ovarian cancers (42.3%). In breast cancer, PELP1 expression was an independent adverse prognostic factor for non-luminal cancers (disease-free survival [DFS]: hazard ratio [HR], 1.403; p=0.012 and breast cancer specific survival [BCSS]: HR, 1.443; p=0.015). Interestingly, its expression affected the prognostication of androgen receptor (AR). AR(pos)PELP1(lo) luminal cancer showed the best DFS (log-rank=8.563, p=0.036) while AR(neg)PELP1(hi) non-luminal cancers showed the worst DFS (log-rank=9.536, p=0.023). CONCLUSION: PELP1 is a sensitive marker for breast cancer, particularly non-luminal cases. However, its considerable expression in lung and ovarian cancers may limit its utility in differential diagnosis in some scenarios. PELP1 expression was associated with poor outcome in non-luminal cancers and modified the prognostic effects of AR, suggesting the potential significance of NR co-regulator in prognostication.
Breast Neoplasms
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Breast
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Carcinoma, Renal Cell
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Colorectal Neoplasms
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Glutamic Acid
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Immunohistochemistry
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Lung
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Lung Neoplasms
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Ovarian Neoplasms
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Phenobarbital
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Prognosis
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Proline
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Receptors, Androgen
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Stomach Neoplasms
6.Machine learning techniques for arrhythmic risk stratification: a review of the literature
Cheuk To CHUNG ; George BAZOUKIS ; Sharen LEE ; Ying LIU ; Tong LIU ; Konstantinos P. LETSAS ; Antonis A. ARMOUNDAS ; Gary TSE
International Journal of Arrhythmia 2022;23(2):10-
Ventricular arrhythmias (VAs) and sudden cardiac death (SCD) are significant adverse events that affect the morbidity and mortality of both the general population and patients with predisposing cardiovascular risk factors. Currently, conventional disease-specific scores are used for risk stratification purposes. However, these risk scores have several limitations, including variations among validation cohorts, the inclusion of a limited number of predictors while omitting important variables, as well as hidden relationships between predictors. Machine learning (ML) techniques are based on algorithms that describe intervariable relationships. Recent studies have implemented ML techniques to construct models for the prediction of fatal VAs. However, the application of ML study findings is limited by the absence of established frameworks for its implementation, in addition to clinicians’ unfamiliarity with ML techniques.This review, therefore, aims to provide an accessible and easy-to-understand summary of the existing evidence about the use of ML techniques in the prediction of VAs. Our findings suggest that ML algorithms improve arrhythmic prediction performance in different clinical settings. However, it should be emphasized that prospective studies comparing ML algorithms to conventional risk models are needed while a regulatory framework is required prior to their implementation in clinical practice
7.Clinical characteristics of adult Chinese patients with syncope: a multicenter clinical study
Fengjing YANG ; Xu LI ; Peng LIANG ; Zhongmei LIU ; Tong LIU ; Yun WU ; Shuanli XIN ; Gaoxing ZHANG ; Shilin YAN ; Lingping XU ; Lixin WANG ; Bo HU ; Wenwei YUE ; Jielin PU ; Zhichun HUANG ; Rui WANG ; Wen WEN ; Peihong LIN ; Li LI ; Zaixin YU ; Xiaodong WANG ; Xijiu LIU ; Jie ZHANG ; Xiufen QU ; Gary TSE ; Yikun PAN ; Kui HONG ; Jieming ZHU ; Lihua LI ; Wen PAN ; Yong WU ; Min WANG ; Changjun SONG ; Zengshuai WANG ; Jianting DONG ; Xinchun YANG ; Xitian HU ; Fujun WANG ; Wenling LIU
Chinese Journal of Cardiology 2022;50(10):1014-1020
Objective:To analyze the clinical characteristics of adult Chinese patients with syncope.Methods:This is a cross-sectional survey study. Patients with preliminary diagnosis of syncope in the Emergency Department, Geriatrics and Cardiology Outpatient Department, or Syncope Unit of 37 hospitals in 19 provinces, autonomous regions and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region from June 2018 to March 2021 were included in this study. The clinical features of these patients with syncope were analyzed.Results:A total of 4 950 consecutive patients with syncope were included in this study. The age was (56.3±16.8)years, and 2 604 cases (52.6%) were male. The most common type of syncope was neurally mediated syncope (2 345 (47.4%)), followed by cardiac syncope (1 085 (21.9%)), orthostatic hypotensive syncope (311 (6.3%)), and unexplained syncope accounted for nearly one third (1 155 (23.3%)). Predisposing syncope was more common in patients under 65 years of age(2 066(72.4%) vs. 786(27.6%),χ 2=136.5, P<0.001). Presyncope was more common in patients with neurally mediated syncope (1 972(79.0%) vs.1 908(73.9%), χ 2=17.756, P<0.001). Premonitory symptoms were more common in women(1 837(80.0%) vs. 1 863(73.0%),χ 2=33.432, P<0.001). Presyncope syndrome was more common in patients under 65 years of age (2 482(77.8%) vs. 1 218(73.4%),χ 2=17.523, P=0.001). Cyanosis was more common in ≥65 years old patients (271(18.2%) vs. 369(12.7%), χ 2=23.235, P<0.001). Urinary incontinence was more common in old patients aged ≥65 years(252(15.2%) vs. 345(10.8%), χ 2=19.313, P<0.001). Family history was more common in patients with cardiogenic syncope compared with other types of syncope (264(24.3%) vs. 754(19.5%), χ 2=11.899, P=0.001). Hypertention(1 480(30.5%)), coronary heart disease(1 057(21.4%)), atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation(359(7.2%)), second degree atrioventricular block(236(4.8%)) were common complications of syncope. The proportion of patients with coronary heart disease was significantly higher in cardiac syncope than that of other types of syncope(417(38.4%) vs. 640(16.6%), χ 2=241.376, P<0.001). Other common complications included cerebrovascular diseases (551 (11.1%)) and diabetes mellitus (632(12.8%)). Conclusions:Neurally mediated syncope is the most common syncope in adult Chinese population. Patients with predisposing conditions and premonitory conditions are younger. Presyncope is more common in women. The proportion of family history and coronary heart disease is higher in patients with cardiogenic syncope.