8 results on '"Krishnayan Haldar"'
Search Results
2. Lesion-specific 3D-printed moulds for image-guided tissue multi-sampling of ovarian tumours: A prospective pilot study
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Maria Delgado-Ortet, Marika A. V. Reinius, Cathal McCague, Vlad Bura, Ramona Woitek, Leonardo Rundo, Andrew B. Gill, Marcel Gehrung, Stephan Ursprung, Helen Bolton, Krishnayan Haldar, Pubudu Pathiraja, James D. Brenton, Mireia Crispin-Ortuzar, Mercedes Jimenez-Linan, Lorena Escudero Sanchez, and Evis Sala
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precision oncology ,ovarian cancer ,cancer imaging ,radiogenomics ,co-registration ,3D-printing ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundHigh-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma (HGSOC) is the most prevalent and lethal subtype of ovarian cancer, but has a paucity of clinically-actionable biomarkers due to high degrees of multi-level heterogeneity. Radiogenomics markers have the potential to improve prediction of patient outcome and treatment response, but require accurate multimodal spatial registration between radiological imaging and histopathological tissue samples. Previously published co-registration work has not taken into account the anatomical, biological and clinical diversity of ovarian tumours.MethodsIn this work, we developed a research pathway and an automated computational pipeline to produce lesion-specific three-dimensional (3D) printed moulds based on preoperative cross-sectional CT or MRI of pelvic lesions. Moulds were designed to allow tumour slicing in the anatomical axial plane to facilitate detailed spatial correlation of imaging and tissue-derived data. Code and design adaptations were made following each pilot case through an iterative refinement process.ResultsFive patients with confirmed or suspected HGSOC who underwent debulking surgery between April and December 2021 were included in this prospective study. Tumour moulds were designed and 3D-printed for seven pelvic lesions, covering a range of tumour volumes (7 to 133 cm3) and compositions (cystic and solid proportions). The pilot cases informed innovations to improve specimen and subsequent slice orientation, through the use of 3D-printed tumour replicas and incorporation of a slice orientation slit in the mould design, respectively. The overall research pathway was compatible with implementation within the clinically determined timeframe and treatment pathway for each case, involving multidisciplinary clinical professionals from Radiology, Surgery, Oncology and Histopathology Departments.ConclusionsWe developed and refined a computational pipeline that can model lesion-specific 3D-printed moulds from preoperative imaging for a variety of pelvic tumours. This framework can be used to guide comprehensive multi-sampling of tumour resection specimens.
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- 2023
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3. Results from Survey to Assess Current Trends in Surgical Practice in the Management of Women with Early Stage Cervical Cancer within the BGCS Community with an Emphasis on Routine Frozen Section Examination
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Kumar Gubbala, Alexandros Laios, Thulumuru Kavitha Madhuri, Pubudu Pathiraja, Krishnayan Haldar, and Sean Kehoe
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
In the UK, more than 3,200 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed each year. Early stage cervical cancer (IA2-IB1) treatment comprises central surgery mainly in the form of radical hysterectomy or fertility sparing surgery including trachelectomy as well as systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy to detect metastases and adjust treatment accordingly. Given the variation in determining the lymph node (LN) status, a major prognosticator, we reviewed the current UK practice of LN assessment in women undergoing surgery for early cervical cancer. A 7-question, web-based survey, screened by the BGCS committee, was circulated amongst BGCS members. The overall response rate was 51%. Only 12.5% of the respondents routinely performed frozen section examination (FSE); the main reasons for not doing FSE were the pressure on theatre time (54.5%) and the lack of available facilities (48.5%). When positive pelvic nodal disease was detected, in 21 out of 50 (42%) the planned radical hysterectomy (RH) was aborted. More than 70% of the respondents routinely performed RH without any prior resort to pelvic lymphadenectomy. Pretreatment surgical para-aortic LN assessment was performed by 20% of the respondents. The survey confirms the diversity of the UK practice patterns in the surgical treatment of early cervical cancer.
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- 2017
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4. Non-contrast MRI can accurately characterize adnexal masses: a retrospective study
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Krishnayan Haldar, Janette Smith, Helen Addley, Joo Ern Ang, Vittorio Simeon, Paolo Chiodini, Mercedes Jimenez-Linan, Evis Sala, Caroline Reinhold, Stephan Ursprung, Hilal Sahin, Sue Freeman, Amy Frary, Helen Bolton, Camilla Panico, Bruno Carmo, Sahin, H., Panico, C., Ursprung, S., Simeon, V., Chiodini, P., Frary, A., Carmo, B., Smith, J., Freeman, S., Jimenez-Linan, M., Bolton, H., Haldar, K., Ang, J. E., Reinhold, C., Sala, E., Addley, H., Sahin, Hilal [0000-0001-8726-8998], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Reproducibility of Result ,Likelihood ratios in diagnostic testing ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Adnexal mass ,Cohort Studies ,Cohen's kappa ,Retrospective Studie ,Ovarian cancer ,Diagnosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,Retrospective Studies ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Urogenital ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Adnexal Disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Confidence interval ,Contrast medium ,Adnexal Diseases ,Female ,Radiology ,Cohort Studie ,business ,Diagnosi ,Human - Abstract
Objective To determine the accuracy of interpretation of a non-contrast MRI protocol in characterizing adnexal masses. Methods and materials Two hundred ninety-one patients (350 adnexal masses) who underwent gynecological MRI at our institution between the 1st of January 2008 and the 31st of December 2018 were reviewed. A random subset (102 patients with 121 masses) was chosen to evaluate the reproducibility and repeatability of readers’ assessments. Readers evaluated non-contrast MRI scans retrospectively, assigned a 5-point score for the risk of malignancy and gave a specific diagnosis. The reference standard for the diagnosis was histopathology or at least one-year imaging follow-up. Diagnostic accuracy of the non-contrast MRI score was calculated. Inter- and intra-reader agreement was analyzed with Cohen’s kappa statistics. Results There were 53/350 (15.1%) malignant lesions in the whole cohort and 20/121 (16.5%) malignant lesions in the random subset. Good agreement between readers was found for the non-contrast MRI score (к = 0.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.58–0.86) whilst the intra-reader agreement was excellent (к = 0.81, 95% CI 0.70–0.88). The non-contrast MRI score value of ≥ 4 was associated with malignancy with a sensitivity of 84.9%, a specificity of 95.9%, an accuracy of 94.2% and a positive likelihood ratio of 21 (area under the receiver operating curve 0.93, 95% CI 0.90–0.96). Conclusion Adnexal mass characterization on MRI without the administration of contrast medium has a high accuracy and excellent inter- and intra-reader agreement. Our results suggest that non-contrast studies may offer a reasonable diagnostic alternative when the administration of intravenous contrast medium is not possible. Key Points • A non-contrast pelvic MRI protocol may allow the characterization of adnexal masses with high accuracy. • The non-contrast MRI score may be used in clinical practice for differentiating benign from malignant adnexal lesions when the lack of intravenous contrast medium precludes analysis with the O–RADS MRI score.
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- 2021
5. Dynamics of Liquid Drop Impact on Liquid Surface and Allied Interfacial Transport Phenomena
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Krishnayan Haldar
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- 2020
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6. Adjuvant radiotherapy for inguinal lymph node metastases following surgery for vulval cancer
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Kieran Hardern, Ahmad Sabbagh, Robert Owens, Lamiese Ismail, Rebecca Shakir, Krishnayan Haldar, and Hooman Soleymani Majd
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Adjuvant radiotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,business.industry ,urogenital system ,fungi ,education ,Vulval cancer ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,embryonic structures ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
This is a protocol for a Cochrane Review (intervention). The objectives are as follows: To assess the effectiveness and safety of adjuvant radiotherapy for women with vulval cancer.
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- 2016
7. Differentiating pelvic actinomycosis from advanced ovarian cancer: a report of two cases, management reflections and literature review
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Sanjiv Manek, Pubudu Pathiraja, Alex Laios, Hooman Soleymani Majd, Krishnayan Haldar, and Iryna Terekh
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Advanced ovarian cancer ,Surgical approach ,business.industry ,Case Report ,PELVIC ACTINOMYCOSIS ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Granulomatous inflammation ,Antibiotic therapy ,medicine ,Radiology ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,Ovarian cancer ,Ovarian malignancy - Abstract
Pelvic actinomycosis comprises a rare, subacute to chronic bacterial infection characterised by suppurative and granulomatous inflammation. Diagnosis is difficult as it may simulate pelvic malignancies. Laboratory and radiological findings are non-specific. We reported on 2 cases of pelvic actinomycosis mimicking ovarian malignancy with different management approaches that lead to opposite outcomes. We reviewed the literature on pelvic actinomycosis imitating ovarian cancer with a focus on its surgical management. Despite agreement on the duration of antibiotic therapy following surgical management, consensus regarding surgical approach was rather equivocal. We concluded that pelvic actinomycosis should be strongly suspected in women with presumed ovarian cancer of atypical presentation and a history of intrauterine devices (IUD). Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/2053-6844-1-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2014
8. DNA-repair pathway inhibitors for the treatment of ovarian cancer
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Jo Morrison, Sean Kehoe, Krishnayan Haldar, Igor E. Martinek, Kezia Gaitskell, Shibani Nicum, and Andrew Bryant
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,DNA Repair Pathway ,Disease ,Debulking ,medicine.disease ,Poly (ADP-Ribose) Polymerase Inhibitor ,Article ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Stage (cooking) ,business ,Ovarian cancer - Abstract
Background Ovarian cancer is the sixth most common cancer and seventh most common cause of cancer death in women world-wide.Three-quarters of women present when the disease has spread through-put the abdomen (stage III or IV) and treatment consists of a combination of debulking surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy, with or without taxanes. Although initial responses to chemotherapy are often good, most women will relapse and require further chemotherapy and will eventually develop resistance to chemotherapy agents. Increased understanding about the molecular basis of ovarian cancer has lead to the development of novel agents, which work in different ways to conventional chemotherapy. These include DNA-repair pathway inhibitors, the commonest of which are the PARP (poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase) inhibitors. It is therefore important to compare their effectiveness and side effects of these novel agents to assess their role in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer, especially as treatment of advanced disease is aiming to improve length of survival and quality of life (QoL).
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- 2010
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