1.Perioperative changes in serum CA125 levels: a prognostic factor for disease-specific survival in patients with ovarian cancer.
Nienke ZWAKMAN ; Rafli VAN DE LAAR ; Toon VAN GORP ; Petra LM ZUSTERZEEL ; Marc PML SNIJDERS ; Isabel FERREIRA ; Leon FAG MASSUGER ; Roy FPM KRUITWAGEN
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 2017;28(1):e7-
OBJECTIVE: In patients with advanced stage epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) the volume of residual tumor after debulking is known as prognostic factor for survival. We wanted to examine the relationship between postoperative decline in serum CA125 and residual disease after cytoreductive surgery and evaluate perioperative changes in serum CA125 levels as predictor for disease-specific survival. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted of patients with FIGO stage IIb-IV EOC treated with cytoreductive surgery, followed by chemotherapy between 1996 and 2010 in three hospitals in the Southeastern region of the Netherlands. Data were analyzed with the use of multilevel linear regression and Cox-proportional hazard regression models. RESULTS: A postoperative decline in serum CA125 level of ≥80% was associated with complete primary cytoreduction (p=0.035). Univariate analyses showed favorable associations with survival for both the degree of decline in serum CA125 and residual tumor after primary cytoreduction. In multivariate analyses the decline in serum CA125 but not the outcome of surgery remained significantly associated with better survival (HR(50%–79%)=0.52 [95% CI: 0.28–0.96] and HR(≥80%)=0.26 [95% CI: 0.13–0.54] vs. the serum CA125 decline of <50% [p<0.001]). CONCLUSION: The current study, although hampered by possible biases, suggests that the perioperative decline in serum CA125 is an early biomarker that predicts disease-specific survival in patients who underwent primary cytoreductive surgery for advanced stage EOC. If confirmed prospectively, the perioperative change in serum CA125 could be a better marker for residual tumor volume after primary cytoreductive surgery (and therewith disease-specific survival) than the surgeons’ estimation of residual tumor volume.
Bias (Epidemiology)
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CA-125 Antigen
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
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Linear Models
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Multivariate Analysis
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Neoplasm, Residual
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Netherlands
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Ovarian Neoplasms*
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Prognosis
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Prospective Studies
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Retrospective Studies
2.Radiographic and computed tomography monitoring of a fractured needle fragment in the mandibular branch.
Maria Isabel de Oliveira e Britto VILLALOBOS ; Thaisa Cristina Gomes Ferreira LEITE ; Samila Gonçalves BARRA ; Daniela Teresa Pinto da Cunha WERNECHE ; Flavio Ricardo MANZI ; Claudia Assunção e Alves CARDOSO
Imaging Science in Dentistry 2017;47(1):63-68
Some complications can arise with the usage of local anesthesia for dental procedures, including the fracture of needles in the patient. This is a rare incident, usually caused by the patient's sudden movements during anesthetic block. Its complications are not common, but can include pain, trismus, inflammation in the region, difficulty in swallowing, and migration of the object, which is the least common but has the ability to cause more serious damage to the patient. This report describes a case in which, after the fracture of the anesthetic needle used during alveolar nerve block for exodontia of the left mandibular third molar, the fragment moved significantly in the first 2 months, before stabilizing after the third month of radiographic monitoring.
Anesthesia, Dental
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Anesthesia, Local
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Deglutition
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Humans
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Inflammation
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Molar, Third
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Needles*
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Nerve Block
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Surgery, Oral
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Trismus