1.Treatment strategies of cytoreductive surgery plus intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy for gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis: a systematic review
Chenghao JI ; Linpo ZHOU ; Yebin YANG ; Junqiang HU ; Haoran WEI ; Fanhe DONG ; Yuqiang SHAN ; Wencheng KONG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(7):740-748
Peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer is associated with rapid disease progression. Hyperthermic intraoperative peritoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) done immediately after cytoreductive surgery (CRS) has become an important treatment for peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer patients. However, different treatment options for HIPEC exist with potential influence on survival rates and prognosis in patients, exist. These treatment options include open or closed abdomen technique, perfusion solution, number of catheters, temperature, duration, and drug regimens. This paper aims to provide more evidence on standardization of HIPEC treatment options and technologies by systematically reviewing different drug regimens and technical approaches. The study included 2 randomized controlled trials, 3 phase I/II clinical trials, 2 prospective cohort studies, and 34 retrospective cohort studies, involving 1511 patients. The most common HIPEC option is to dissolve 50-75 mg/m 2 of Cisplatin and 30-40 mg/m 2 of Mitomycin C in 3-4 L saline solution at 42-43℃. After gastrointestinal anastomosis, 2-3 catheters are used in the HIPEC system with a perfusion flow rate of 500 ml/min. The duration is 60-90 minutes. Anastomotic leakage was low in studies where HIPEC was performed after gastrointestinal anastomosis. The utilization of open HIPEC and a two-drug regimen resulted in improved overall survival rates. The future development of HIPEC aims to enhance tumor-specific therapy by optimizing various aspects, such as identifying the safest and most effective chemotherapy regimens, refining patient selection criteria, and improving perioperative care.
2.Treatment strategies of cytoreductive surgery plus intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy for gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis: a systematic review
Chenghao JI ; Linpo ZHOU ; Yebin YANG ; Junqiang HU ; Haoran WEI ; Fanhe DONG ; Yuqiang SHAN ; Wencheng KONG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2024;27(7):740-748
Peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer is associated with rapid disease progression. Hyperthermic intraoperative peritoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) done immediately after cytoreductive surgery (CRS) has become an important treatment for peritoneal metastasis in gastric cancer patients. However, different treatment options for HIPEC exist with potential influence on survival rates and prognosis in patients, exist. These treatment options include open or closed abdomen technique, perfusion solution, number of catheters, temperature, duration, and drug regimens. This paper aims to provide more evidence on standardization of HIPEC treatment options and technologies by systematically reviewing different drug regimens and technical approaches. The study included 2 randomized controlled trials, 3 phase I/II clinical trials, 2 prospective cohort studies, and 34 retrospective cohort studies, involving 1511 patients. The most common HIPEC option is to dissolve 50-75 mg/m 2 of Cisplatin and 30-40 mg/m 2 of Mitomycin C in 3-4 L saline solution at 42-43℃. After gastrointestinal anastomosis, 2-3 catheters are used in the HIPEC system with a perfusion flow rate of 500 ml/min. The duration is 60-90 minutes. Anastomotic leakage was low in studies where HIPEC was performed after gastrointestinal anastomosis. The utilization of open HIPEC and a two-drug regimen resulted in improved overall survival rates. The future development of HIPEC aims to enhance tumor-specific therapy by optimizing various aspects, such as identifying the safest and most effective chemotherapy regimens, refining patient selection criteria, and improving perioperative care.
3.Research progress in radiation induced hearing loss
Ruichen LI ; Ye ZHANG ; Qifeng WANG ; Jinbo YUE ; Pei YANG ; Wencheng ZHANG ; Xiaoshen WANG
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology 2024;33(11):993-998
Hearing loss is one of the common radiotherapy-induced complications of head and neck tumors, including nasopharyngeal carcinoma. These side reactions can be classified into acute or delayed types, which affect all structures of the auditory organs, resulting in conductive, sensorineural or mixed hearing loss. Up to 40% of patients develop acute middle ear side effects during radical radiotherapy, while approximately 1/3 develop late sensorineural hearing loss. The total radiation dose and tumor site appear to be the most important factors associated with the risk of hearing loss. The mechanisms of conductive and sensorineural hearing impairment are different. New radiotherapy techniques (three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy, intensity modulated radiotherapy, proton therapy) enable better dose distribution, lower dose to non-target organs, and gradually increase the feasibility of protecting normal tissues. The present article illustrates recent progress in radiotherapy-induced hearing loss, specially focusing on the occurrence, the mechanisms and related factors of ear toxicity, detection and diagnosis, and treatment.
4.Research progress in radiation-induced dysphagia
Shunxin WANG ; Yiming LEI ; Yi YANG ; Lei CHEN ; Pei YANG ; Jinbo YUE ; Ye ZHANG ; Wencheng ZHANG ; Qifeng WANG ; Yanping MAO
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology 2024;33(11):999-1006
Dysphagia is the main complication of chemoradiotherapy for head and neck cancer. Recently, the advancement of multidisciplinary treatment has achieved a higher tumor control rate, but also a higher incidence of late radiation-induced dysphagia in head and neck cancer. Radiation-induced dysphagia leads to prolonged unnatural feeding, nutritional deficiency, weight loss, and also has a major risk for silent aspiration and aspiration pneumonia, which significantly reduces the quality of life of patients. Besides, late radiation-induced dysphagia is the main reason for limiting the intensity of treatment. Therefore, it is of great significance to deeply understand the pathogenesis of radiation-induced dysphagia and actively explore effective prevention and treatment measures to improve the survival rate and quality of life in head and neck cancer. This paper summarizes the pathogenesis, occurrence, risk factors of radiation-induced dysphagia in head and neck cancer, as well as the progress in the measurement and reporting methods, prevention and treatment strategies.
5.Research progress in radiation-induced heart disease
Xin WANG ; Ye ZHANG ; Qifeng WANG ; Jinbo YUE ; Pei YANG ; Wencheng ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology 2024;33(11):1007-1015
Cardiotoxicity is traditionally regarded as the late toxic side effect of radiotherapy. Classical radiobiology suggests that non-proliferative and highly-differentiated tissues, such as the heart, should exhibit robust resistance to ionizing radiation. However, in-depth analyses of radiation-induced heart disease (RIHD) have discovered that radiation can induce a range of physiological changes in the heart. These changes, which include endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, thrombosis, and cardiac fibrosis, may be significantly accelerated as radiation doses increase. At present, multidisciplinary team treatment modalities have substantially enhanced curative effects for cancer patients. However, the resulting prolongation of survival time exposes a larger patient population to the risks of treatment-related cardiotoxicity, establishing RIHD as a pressing research concern. This article offers a systematic review of recent insights into the incidence of RIHD, the relationship between radiotherapy and RIHD, methods for its detection and diagnosis, as well as its pathogenesis and potential treatment strategies.
6.Research progress in radiation-induced small intestine injury
Fuhao WANG ; Ye ZHANG ; Qifeng WANG ; Pei YANG ; Wencheng ZHANG ; Jinbo YUE
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology 2024;33(11):1016-1023
Surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy are currently the principal modalities for oncological treatment. Approximately 70% of patients with malignant tumors require radiotherapy. However, the damage induced by radiation on normal human tissues remains an unavoidable issue in clinical practice. When radiotherapy is applied to abdominal and pelvic tumors such as liver cancer, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer, and prostate cancer, the anatomical proximity of these organs to the small intestine inevitably leads to some degree of intestinal damage. This type of injury, induced by radiotherapy, is referred as radiation-induced small intestine injury. Clinically, a high incidence of radiation-induced small intestine injury is observed among patients receiving pelvic and abdominal radiotherapy, which not only impacts the quality of life of cancer patients, but also limits the effectiveness of the treatment. This article reviews the research progress in radiation-induced small intestine injury.
7.Research progress in radiation-induced skin injury
Jinlong WEI ; Qin ZHAO ; Jincai LYU ; Zining TAN ; Xuanzhong WANG ; Qifeng WANG ; Jinbo YUE ; Pei YANG ; Wencheng ZHANG ; Shuang LI ; Ye ZHANG ; Xin JIANG ; Bing WANG
Chinese Journal of Radiation Oncology 2024;33(11):1024-1032
Radiotherapy is one of the main treatment methods for malignant tumors, which can cause the radiation damage to normal tissues. Radiation-induced skin injury (RISI) is one of the main adverse reactions caused by radiotherapy. The main clinical manifestations of RISI are dermatitis, ulcer, erosion and necrosis, which seriously affect the quality of life and treatment effect of tumor radiotherapy patients, and even affect the overall survival of patients. The pathological mechanism of RISI is still unclear. Some studies have shown that inflammation and oxidative stress are the main causes of RISI. RISI can be divided into acute and chronic RISI according to the different onset time, and different treatment strategies can be formulated according to the severity of the injury. In this article, clinical manifestations, classification, pathogenesis, prevention and treatment of RISI are comprehensively summarized.
8.Robot-assisted single lung transplantation.
Wenjie JIAO ; Ronghua YANG ; Yandong ZHAO ; Nan GE ; Tong QIU ; Xiao SUN ; Yingzhi LIU ; Kun LI ; Zhiqiang LI ; Wencheng YU ; Yi QIN ; Ao LIU
Chinese Medical Journal 2023;136(3):362-364
9.Exploring the links between gut microbiome changes and irritable bowel syndrome in Han populations in the Tibetan Plateau.
Xingguang ZHANG ; Wei XU ; Weilong ZHONG ; Wencheng ZHANG ; Cheng YANG ; Lisa DUAN ; Haiyan NIU ; Yanmei DONG ; Taotao LIU ; Shihai XIA ; Bangmao WANG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2023;():1-16
The gut microbiome shows changes under a plateau environment, while the disbalance of intestinal microbiota plays an important role in the pathogenesis of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS); however, the relationship between the two remains unexplored. In this work, we followed up a healthy cohort for up to a year before and after living in a plateau environment and performed 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) sequencing analysis of their fecal samples. Through evaluating the participants' clinical symptoms, combined with an IBS questionnaire, we screened the IBS sub-population in our cohort. The sequencing results showed that a high-altitude environment could lead to changes in the diversity and composition of gut flora. In addition, we found that the longer the time volunteers spent in the plateau environment, the more similar their gut microbiota composition and abundance became compared to those before entering the plateau, and IBS symptoms were significantly alleviated. Therefore, we speculated that the plateau may be a special environment that induces IBS. The taxonomic units g_Alistipes, g_Oscillospira, and s_Ruminococcus_torques, which had been proved to play important roles in IBS pathogenesis, were also abundant in the IBS cohort at high altitudes. Overall, the disbalance of gut microbiota induced by the plateau environment contributed to the high frequency of IBS and the psychosocial abnormalities associated with IBS. Our results prompt further research to elucidate the relevant mechanism.
10.Liver cell therapies: cellular sources and grafting strategies.
Wencheng ZHANG ; Yangyang CUI ; Yuan DU ; Yong YANG ; Ting FANG ; Fengfeng LU ; Weixia KONG ; Canjun XIAO ; Jun SHI ; Lola M REID ; Zhiying HE
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(3):432-457
The liver has a complex cellular composition and a remarkable regenerative capacity. The primary cell types in the liver are two parenchymal cell populations, hepatocytes and cholangiocytes, that perform most of the functions of the liver and that are helped through interactions with non-parenchymal cell types comprising stellate cells, endothelia and various hemopoietic cell populations. The regulation of the cells in the liver is mediated by an insoluble complex of proteins and carbohydrates, the extracellular matrix, working synergistically with soluble paracrine and systemic signals. In recent years, with the rapid development of genetic sequencing technologies, research on the liver's cellular composition and its regulatory mechanisms during various conditions has been extensively explored. Meanwhile breakthroughs in strategies for cell transplantation are enabling a future in which there can be a rescue of patients with end-stage liver diseases, offering potential solutions to the chronic shortage of livers and alternatives to liver transplantation. This review will focus on the cellular mechanisms of liver homeostasis and how to select ideal sources of cells to be transplanted to achieve liver regeneration and repair. Recent advances are summarized for promoting the treatment of end-stage liver diseases by forms of cell transplantation that now include grafting strategies.
Humans
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Liver/surgery*
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Hepatocytes/transplantation*
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Stem Cells/metabolism*
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Liver Diseases/surgery*

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