362 results on '"Issa, Muta M."'
Search Results
102. Transurethral Needle Ablation of the Prostate
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Issa, Muta M., primary
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- 1996
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103. A unique perineal herniation of large bladder diverticulum: successful surgical repair through posterior sagittal approach
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Gong, Michael, primary and Issa, Muta M., additional
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- 1996
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104. Transurethral needle ablation (TUNATM)
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Issa, Muta M., primary and Oesterling, Joseph E., additional
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- 1996
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105. Insight into mechanism of neodymium: Yttrium-aluminum-garnet laser prostatectomy utilizing the high-power contact-free beam technique
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Kabalin, John N., primary, Gong, Michael, additional, Issa, Muta M., additional, and Sellers, Robert, additional
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- 1995
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106. Spermatic cord metastasis from transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder
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Issa, Muta M., primary, Kabalin, John N., additional, Dietrick, Daniel D., additional, Reese, Jeffrey, additional, and Freiha, Fuad S., additional
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- 1994
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107. Youssef’s Syndrome: Preservation of Uterine Function with Subsequent Successful Pregnancy following Surgical Repair
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Issa, Muta M., primary, Schmid, Hans-Peter, additional, and Stamey, Thomas A., additional
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- 1994
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108. Large, Organ Confined, Impalpable Transition Zone Prostate Cancer: Association with Metastatic Levels of Prostate Specific Antigen
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Stamey, Thomas A., primary, Dietrick, Daniel D., additional, and Issa, Muta M., additional
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- 1993
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109. Ureteral Compliance and Histology in Partial Obstruction in a Canine Model
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Harada, Tadashi, primary, Issa, Muta M., additional, Kigure, Teruaki, additional, and Tsuchida, Seigi, additional
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- 1992
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- View/download PDF
110. The Effect of Bacteriuria on Bladder and Renal Pelvic Pressures in the Rat
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Issa, Muta M., primary, Dairiki Shortliffe, Linda M., additional, and Constantinou, Christos E., additional
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- 1992
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- View/download PDF
111. Microwave Coagulation Therapy on VX-2 Carcinoma Implanted in Rabbit Urinary Bladders
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Harada, Tadashi, primary, Koh, Daisuke, additional, Kigure, Teruaki, additional, Tsuchida, Seigi, additional, and Issa, Muta M., additional
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- 1992
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112. Intravesical Migration of Intrauterine Device
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Dietrick, Daniel D., primary, Issa, Muta M., additional, Kabalin, John N., additional, and Bassett, James B., additional
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- 1992
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113. Pediatric genitourinary tumors
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Issa, Muta M., primary and Shortliffe, Linda M. Dairiki, additional
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- 1991
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114. Clinical uroradiologic conferenceGross hematuria and upper pole renal filling defect
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Schlegel, Peter N., primary, Issa, Muta M., additional, Stutzman, Ray E., additional, and Goldman M.D., Stanford M., additional
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- 1991
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115. Prophylactic minitracheotomy in lung resections
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Issa, Muta M., primary, Healy, Davina M., additional, Maghur, Hassan A., additional, and Luke, David A., additional
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- 1991
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- View/download PDF
116. Familial occurrence of thyroglossal duct cyst
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Issa, Muta M., primary and deVries, Pieter, additional
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- 1991
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117. Initial Experience with the Radiotracer Anti-1- Amino-3-18F-Fluorocyclobutane-1-Carboxylic Acid with PET/CT in Prostate Carcinoma.
- Author
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Schuster, David M., Votaw, John R., Nieh, Peter T., Weiping Yu, Nye, Jonathon A., Master, Viraj, Bowman, F. DuBois, Issa, Muta M., and Goodman, Mark M.
- Published
- 2007
118. Urological Society for American Veterans Meeting (USAV).
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Issa, Muta M. and Siddiqui, M. Minhaj
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VETERANS - Published
- 2021
119. Transurethral needle ablation (TUNATM).
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Issa, Muta M. and Oesterling, Joseph E.
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- 1996
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120. Patients Prefer Tele-Urology over Face-to-Face Clinics.
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Pearl, Jeffrey A. and Issa, Muta M.
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UROLOGY , *UROLOGICAL nursing - Abstract
The article presents graphs and charts based on the preference of patients for tele-urology over face-to-face clinic encounters in the U.S. in 2016.
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- 2016
121. A New Technique of using the in Situ Appendix as a Catheterizable Stoma in Continent Urinary Reservoirs
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Issa, Muta M., primary, Oesterling, Joseph E., additional, Canning, Douglas A., additional, and Jeffs, Robert D., additional
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- 1989
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122. Intrascrotal neurofibromas
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Issa, Muta M., Yagol, Richard, and Tsang, Donald
- Abstract
A solitary intrascrotal neurofibroma in a seventy-seven-year-old man is reported. This benign tumor of the nerve sheath arises from the Schwann cell and is rare in the external genitalia, especially in the absence of clinical and histopathologic stigmas of von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis. The literature on intrascrotal neurofibromas is reviewed.
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- 1993
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123. Tele-Urology Enhances Access and Care of Hematuria Referrals.
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Issa, Muta M.
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PATIENTS' attitudes , *TELEPHONE calls , *MEDICAL appointments , *HEMATURIA , *URINARY organ diseases - Abstract
The article discusses the findings of a survey of patients with asymptomatic microhematuria (MH) who used telephone appointments as an alternative to conventional clinic visits. The survey found that 98% of patients preferred telephone encounters for the initial hematuria evaluation. The common factors for preferences toward the tele-urology program are mentioned including difficulties finding parking, traffic congestion, long travel distance/time, and checking in or checking out delays.
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- 2015
124. Editorial Commentary
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Wendel, Elizabeth C., Carney, K. Jeff, and Issa, Muta M.
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- 2018
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125. Accurate Documentation Contributes to Guideline-concordant Surveillance of Nonmuscle Invasive Bladder Cancer: A Multisite Department of Veterans Affairs Study.
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Lyall, Vikram, Ould Ismail, A. Aziz, Haggstrom, David A., Issa, Muta M., Siddiqui, M. Minhaj, Tosoian, Jeffrey, and Schroeck, Florian R.
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NON-muscle invasive bladder cancer , *DOCUMENTATION , *BLADDER cancer , *EVIDENCE-based psychotherapy - Abstract
To determine if accurate documentation of bladder cancer risk was associated with a clinician surveillance recommendation that is concordant with AUA guidelines among patients with nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). We prospectively collected data from cystoscopy encounter notes from four Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) sites to ascertain whether they included accurate documentation of bladder cancer risk and a recommendation for a guideline-concordant surveillance interval. Accurate documentation was a clinician-recorded risk classification matching a gold standard assigned by the research team. Clinician recommendations were guideline-concordant if the clinician recorded a surveillance interval that was in line with the AUA guideline. Among 296 encounters, 75 were for low-, 98 for intermediate-, and 123 for high-risk NMIBC. 52% of encounters had accurate documentation of NMIBC risk. Accurate documentation of risk was less common among encounters for low-risk bladder cancer (36% vs 52% for intermediate- and 62% for high-risk, P <.05). Guideline-concordant surveillance recommendations were also less common in patients with low-risk bladder cancer (67% vs 89% for intermediate- and 94% for high-risk, P <.05). Accurate documentation was associated with a 29% and 15% increase in guideline-concordant surveillance recommendations for low- and intermediate-risk disease, respectively (P <.05). Accurate risk documentation was associated with more guideline-concordant surveillance recommendations among low- and intermediate-risk patients. Implementation strategies facilitating assessment and documentation of risk may be useful to reduce overuse of surveillance in this group and to prevent unnecessary cost, anxiety, and procedural harms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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126. MP16-05 TELEUROLOGY TO ENHANCE ACCESS AND EXPEDITE CARE OF PATIENTS REFERRED WITH HEMATURIA.
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Gabale, Salil, Safir, Ilan, White, Catrina, Kimberl, I. Jane, Fabian, Debra, and Issa, Muta M.
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HEMATURIA ,MEDICAL consultation ,MEDICAL referrals ,HEMORRHAGE ,URINALYSIS - Published
- 2015
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127. Speak Out.
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Issa, Muta M.
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PHYSICIANS , *MEDICAL practice , *PATIENT education , *BLOOD testing , *INFORMATION resources , *PATIENTS - Abstract
The article presents information on the suggestions of several readers related to the practice of defensive medicine. One reader says that patient education has improved and that they spend more time with their patients and they have packets of printed material so the patients can take the information home and review it. Another reader says that he often finds himself preoccupied trying to dismantle defensive protocols that are set up around him. One example of that is routine use of a battery of blood tests before surgical procedures.
- Published
- 2005
128. Implementation of a Tele-urology Program for Outpatient Hematuria Referrals: Initial Results and Patient Satisfaction.
- Author
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Safir, Ilan J., Gabale, Salil, David, Samuel A., Huang, Jonathan H., Gerhard, Robert S., Pearl, Jeffrey, Lorentz, Charles A., Baumgardner, James, Filson, Christopher P., and Issa, Muta M.
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HEMATURIA , *PATIENT satisfaction , *CYSTOSCOPY , *MEDICAL care , *TELEMEDICINE , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective: To report on results from a new tele-urology pathway for managing hematuria consults, including a survey of patient attitudes and satisfaction with such a program. Recent guideline changes have relaxed the definition of microscopic hematuria and may have significantly increased the number of hematuria evaluations.Materials and Methods: Patients referred to the Atlanta Veterans Administration Medical Center with hematuria were scheduled for a tele-urology clinic encounter utilizing a telephone call to obtain hematuria-related clinical information via a standardized algorithm. At subsequent cystoscopy, patients were evaluated with a 29-question survey regarding overall acceptance and satisfaction of the clinic (8 questions) and impact factors (21 questions).Results: One hundred fifty veterans participated in the survey. Median time from consult request to appointment was 12 days and thereafter to cystoscopy was 16 days. Patients reported high acceptance and overall satisfaction with telephone evaluation; mean scores exceeded 9 out of 10 for overall satisfaction, efficiency, convenience, friendliness, care quality, understandability, privacy, and professionalism. When presented with a choice, nearly all patients (98%) preferred telephone-based encounters to face-to-face clinic visits. Underlying negative factors responsible for patients' preferences included transportation-related issues (97%) and logistical clinic issues (65%). Ninety-seven percent of patients reported high-quality evaluation.Conclusion: Patients report high acceptance and satisfaction with telephone clinics as a mechanism for expedited hematuria evaluation, primarily due to avoiding barriers related to transportation and clinical operations, as well as a perceived high quality of evaluation. Telephone appointments have potential to positively impact healthcare access and productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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129. A 7% Decrease in the Differential Renal Uptake of MAG3 Implies a Loss in Renal Function
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Taylor, Andrew, Manatunga, Amita, Halkar, Raghuveer, Issa, Muta M., and Shenvi, Neeta V.
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KIDNEY function tests , *THIOLS , *KIDNEY diseases , *UROLOGY , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *MEDICAL imaging systems , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PARAMETER estimation , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Objectives: To address the fact that a decrease in the relative renal uptake of 99mTc-mercaptoacetyltriglycine (MAG3) on serial MAG3 scans may indicate a loss of function and require a change in management by providing guidance as to what constitutes a meaningful change in serial relative function measurements as well determining the normal variation of other common MAG3 renogram parameters. Methods: A prospective study was conducted in 24 male urology patients with stable renal function. The mean age was 66.5 ± 7.9 (SD) years; the mean serum creatinine was 1.38 ± 0.57 (SD) mg/dL, and the MAG3 renal scans were performed a mean of 11 ± 8 days apart. Each MAG3 scan included a measurement of relative function as well as the time to maximum counts and 20 minutes to maximum count ratios for both cortical and whole kidney regions of interest. Results: The Pearson and intraclass correlations for the baseline and repeat measurements of relative renal function were both 0.98. Bland-Altman plots showed no bias between the baseline and repeat relative uptake measurements. The mean difference between 2 repeated measurements of the relative MAG3 uptake was 0.04 ± 2.88% (SD) for the left kidney and 0.08 ± 3.07% (SD) for the right kidney. Comparable results were obtained for the other renogram parameters. Conclusions: Measurements of relative renal uptake of MAG3 and common renogram parameters are highly reproducible; a decrease in relative uptake ≥7% (ie, 50%-43%) implies a loss in renal function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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130. Initial experience with the radiotracer anti-1-amino-3-[18F]Fluorocyclobutane-1-carboxylic acid (anti-[ 18F]FACBC) with PET in renal carcinoma.
- Author
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Schuster, David M, Nye, Jonathon A, Nieh, Peter T, Votaw, John R, Halkar, Raghuveer K, Issa, Muta M, Yu, Weiping, Sepulveda, Julio, Zeng, Wanzhen, Young, Andrew, and Goodman, Mark M
- Abstract
Purpose: Assessment of renal masses with conventional imaging may be challenging. Anti-1-amino-3-[(18)F]fluorocyclobutane-1-carboxylic acid (anti-[18F]FACBC) is a synthetic L: -leucine analog with relatively little renal excretion. The present study examines anti-[(18)F]FACBC positron emission tomography uptake in patients with renal masses.Procedures: Six patients with seven renal lesions were imaged dynamically for 2 h after injection of 10-10.9 mCi (370-403 MBq) anti-[(18)F]FACBC. Lesions were evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively and correlated with histology.Results: Four clear cell and one Rosai-Dorfman lesion were hypo/isointense to normal cortex; two papillary lesions in the same patient were hyperintense. Mean SUV(max) +/- SD at 30 min was 2.8 +/- 0.24 for clear cell carcinomas and 4.5 +/- 1.7 for papillary cell lesions. Mean SUV(max)/SUV(mean) ratios +/- SD of lesion to normal cortex at 30 min was 1.15 +/- 0.19 for the clear cell carcinomas and 2.3 +/- 0.84 for papillary cell.Conclusions: In this small patient sample, relative amino acid transport compared with renal cortex is elevated in renal papillary cell carcinoma but not in clear cell carcinoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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131. Monitoring Renal Function: A Prospective Study Comparing Camera-Based Technetium-99m Mercaptoacetyltriglycine Clearance and Creatinine Clearance
- Author
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Halkar, Raghuveer, Taylor, Andrew, Manatunga, Amita, Issa, Muta M., Myrick, Samuel E., Grant, Sandra, and Shenvi, Neeta V.
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CREATININE , *BLOOD plasma , *TECHNETIUM , *SERUM , *BIOTRANSFORMATION (Metabolism) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *KIDNEY function tests , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Objectives: To determine the value and limitations of technetium-99m mercaptoacetyltriglycine (MAG3) clearance measurements obtained using a gamma camera (camera-based MAG3 clearance), a prospective study was conducted to evaluate the reproducibility of camera-based MAG3 clearance compared with that of conventional creatinine clearance.Methods: A total of 24 male patients with stable renal function were entered into the study. The mean age was 66.5 +/- 7.9 years, and the mean serum creatinine was 1.38 +/- 0.57 mg/dL. MAG3 renal scans and 24-hour creatinine clearance measurements were performed 11 +/- 8 days apart. A camera-based MAG3 clearance was obtained at each MAG3 scan; no blood samples were required. Bland-Altman plots were constructed to assist in data analysis.Results: The Pearson correlation for the first and second camera-based MAG3 clearances (mean 151 versus 158 mL/min/1.73 m2, respectively) was 0.965 compared with 0.729 for the two creatinine clearance measurements (mean 62 versus 72 mL/min/1.73 m2, respectively). Even with the omission of two outliers, the creatinine clearance would have to change by 58.2% compared with the baseline measurement before the clinician could be confident the change exceeded the error of measurement. In contrast, the change required for the camera-based MAG3 clearance was 30.8%.Conclusions: The results of this study have demonstrated that MAG3 clearance obtained using a camera-based technique shows greater precision than the conventional creatinine clearance and is superior to the conventional creatinine clearance for monitoring changes in renal function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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132. MtDNA mutations increase tumorigenicity in prostate cancer.
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Petros, John A., Baumann, Amanda K., Ruiz-Pesini, Eduardo, Amin, Mahul B., Carrie Qi Sun, John Hall, SoDug Lim, Issa, Muta M., Flanders, W. Dana, Hosseini, Seyed H., Marshall, Fray F., and Wallace, Douglas C.
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GENETIC mutation , *PROSTATE cancer , *DNA , *CARCINOGENESIS , *NUCLEIC acids , *GENETICS - Abstract
Mutations in the mtDNA have been found to fulfill all of the criteria expected for pathogenic mutations causing prostate cancer Focusing on the cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COl) gene, we found that 11-12% of all prostate cancer patients harbored COl mutations that altered conserved amino acids (mean conservation index = 83%), whereas <2% of no-cancer controls and 7.8% of the general population had COl mutations, the latter altering less conserved amino acids (conservation index =71 %). Four conserved prostate cancer COl mutations were found in multiple independent patients on different mtDNA backgrounds. Three other tumors contained heteroplasmic COl mutations, one of which created a stop codon. This latter tumor also contained a germ-line ATP6 mutation. Thus, both germ-line and somatic mtDNA mutations contribute to prostate cancer. Many tumors have been found to produce increased reactive oxygen species (ROS), and mtDNA mutations that inhibit oxidative phosphorylation can increase ROS production and thus contribute to tumorigenicity. To determine whether mutant tumors had increased ROS and tumor growth rates, we introduced the pathogenic mtDNA ATP6 T8993G mutation into the PC3 prostate cancer cell line through cybrid transfer and tested for tumor growth in nude mice. The resulting mutant (18993G) cybrids were found to generate tumors that were 7 times larger than the wild-type (T8993T) cybrids, whereas the wild-type cybrids barely grew in the mice. The mutant tumors also generated significantly more ROS. Therefore, mtDNA mutations do play an important role in the etiology of prostate cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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133. Perioperative Mobile Telehealth Program for Post-Prostatectomy Incontinence: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Goode PS, Johnson TM 2nd, Newman DK, Vaughan CP, Echt KV, Markland AD, Kennedy R, Van Arsdalen KN, Rais-Bahrami S, Issa MM, Barnacastle S, Wright KC, McCabe P, Malone MP, Redden DT, and Burgio KL
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Exercise Therapy methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pelvic Floor, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Prostatectomy methods, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Telemedicine, Urinary Incontinence diagnosis, Urinary Incontinence etiology, Urinary Incontinence prevention & control
- Abstract
Purpose: Perioperative pelvic floor muscle training can hasten recovery of bladder control and reduce severity of urinary incontinence following radical prostatectomy. Nevertheless, most men undergoing prostatectomy do not receive this training. The purpose of this trial was to test the effectiveness of interactive mobile telehealth (mHealth) to deliver an evidence-based perioperative behavioral training program for post-prostatectomy incontinence., Materials and Methods: This was a 3-site, 2-arm, randomized trial (2014-2019). Men with prostate cancer scheduled to undergo radical prostatectomy were randomized to a perioperative behavioral program (education, pelvic floor muscle training, progressive exercises, bladder control techniques) or a general prostate cancer education control condition, both delivered by mHealth for 1-4 weeks preoperatively and 8 weeks postoperatively. The primary outcome was time to continence following surgery measured by the ICIQ (International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire) Short-Form. Secondary outcomes measured at 6, 9 and 12 months included Urinary Incontinence Subscale of Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite; pad use; International Prostate Symptom Score QoL Question and Global Perception of Improvement., Results: A total of 245 men (ages 42-78 years; mean=61.7) were randomized. Survival analysis using the Kaplan-Meier estimate showed no statistically significant between-group differences in time to continence. Analyses at 6 months indicated no statistically significant between-group differences in ICIQ scores (mean=7.1 vs 7.0, p=0.7) or other secondary outcomes., Conclusions: mHealth delivery of a perioperative program to reduce post-prostatectomy incontinence was not more effective than an mHealth education program. More research is needed to assess whether perioperative mHealth programs can be a helpful addition to standard prostate cancer care.
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- 2022
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134. Patient Acceptance of Teleurology via Telephone vs Face-to-Face Clinic Visits for Hematuria Consultation at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
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Safir IJ, Zholudev V, Laganosky D, Aliperti L, Al-Qassab U, Lindelow J, Filson CP, and Issa MM
- Abstract
Introduction: We evaluated the experience and preferences of patients undergoing hematuria consultation via teleurology compared to a conventional face-to-face clinic visit., Methods: Patients evaluated for hematuria with teleurology or face-to-face clinic visit were surveyed regarding their experience and preferences. The survey consisted of 27 questions evaluating overall acceptance and satisfaction (8 questions), impact factors (17) and preference (2)., Results: A total of 450 patients participated in the survey at a 2-to-1 ratio (300 via teleurology, 150 via face-to-face visits). Overall, patient satisfaction level was higher with teleurology compared to face-to-face clinic visits (mean score 9.2 vs 8.4, p < 0.0001). This finding was observed in all 8 domains (acceptance, efficiency, convenience, friendliness, quality of interview, communication and care, provider professionalism and privacy protection, all p <0.001). Transportation related issues were the most common underlying reason that influenced patient opinion, with at least 1 transportation factor being reported by 280 of 300 teleurology patients (93.3%) and 133 of 150 patients seen face-to-face (88.7%). Clinic operation and provider interaction factors similarly impacted patient satisfaction and preference. Time to access was significantly better for teleurology (12 days) compared to face-to-face clinics (72 days, p < 0.001). Overall incidence of bladder cancer was 5.6% (25 of 450 patients), which was observed in 6.3% of the teleurology group (19 of 300) and 4.0% of the face-to-face group (6 of 150, p = 0.386)., Conclusions: Patients prefer teleurology to face-to-face clinic visits for the initial evaluation of hematuria. Teleurology positively impacts compliance and access by potentially eliminating common challenges facing patients, and by improving efficiency, convenience and flexibility.
- Published
- 2018
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135. Impact of remote monitoring and supervision on resident training using new ACGME milestone criteria.
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Safir IJ, Shrewsberry AB, Issa IM, Ogan K, Ritenour CW, Sullivan J, and Issa MM
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- Consumer Behavior, Cystoscopy education, Educational Measurement, Humans, Learning, Lithotripsy, Prostatectomy, Remote Consultation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Ureteroscopy education, Videoconferencing, Attitude of Health Personnel, Endoscopy education, Internship and Residency methods, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery, Urology education
- Abstract
Introduction: The study objective was to determine the impact of remote monitoring and supervision (RMS) in integrated endourology suites (IES) on residents achieving endoscopic training milestones., Materials and Methods: Twenty-one urology residents evaluated RMS in IES using a 25-question survey. IES provided audio-visual communication for faculty to supervise residents remotely. Questionnaire used a linear visual scale of 1-10 to assess acceptability (8 questions), impact on training (10 questions), supervision level (1 question), and pre- and post-training milestone self-assessments (6 questions). Improvements in Patient Care Milestone #7 (upper/lower tract endoscopic procedures) and Patient Care Milestone #9 (office-based procedures) were analyzed., Results: Twenty-one urology residents (out of potential 23) evaluated RMS in IES using a 25-question survey (91.3% response rate). Overall RMS acceptability and satisfaction was high (mean score = 9.1/10) with a majority (95.2%) feeling comfortable being alone with the patient. Residents reported positively on the following parameters: autonomy without compromising safety (8.7), supervision level (8.6), achieving independence (8.4), education quality (8.3), learning rate (8.1), clinical decision-making (8.0), and reducing case numbers to achieve proficiency (7.6). Residents perceived no issues with under- or over-supervision, and a majority (76.2%) expressed that RMS should be standard of training in residency programs. Residents reported mean level increases of 2.5 and 2.8 (out of 5) in Patient Care Milestones for endoscopic procedures and office-based procedures, respectively (p < 0.0001)., Conclusions: RMS in integrated endourology suites may enhance resident education and endoscopic training. The study demonstrated an increase in competency levels reported by residents trained using RMS.
- Published
- 2015
136. The Value of Pathological Examination of the Foreskin Following Circumcision.
- Author
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Safir IJ, Patel AP, Moore BP, Patil D, Bellott-McGrath G, Osunkoya AO, and Issa MM
- Abstract
Introduction: We determined the clinical impact and value of routine histopathological examination of the foreskin following circumcision., Methods: We performed a retrospective study of 225 consecutive adult circumcisions. Indications for circumcision were categorized as benign or malignant based on preoperative clinical evaluation. Histopathological results were similarly classified as benign or malignant. Preoperative clinical impression and postoperative histological diagnosis were compared and reported as concordant (in agreement) or discordant (in disagreement). The cost impact of histopathology examination was analyzed with respect to study findings., Results: Of the 225 patients 209 (92.9%) had clinically benign disease on preoperative evaluation and 16 (7.1%) had foreskin lesions suspicious for malignancy. Mean age was 57.0 years (range 23 to 92). Patients were younger in the benign group than in the malignant group (56.5 vs 62.8 years, p = 0.018). Black patients represented 65.8% of the study population and were similarly distributed between the 2 groups (p = 0.405). There was no statistical difference in patient height, weight, body mass index or comorbidities between the 2 groups. Preoperative clinical impression and postoperative histological diagnosis were concordant in all 209 patients in the benign group. Of the 16 patients suspected to have malignant disease preoperatively 9 (56.2%) had malignancy and 7 (43.8%) had benign disease on histopathological examination., Conclusions: Routine histological examination of a foreskin specimen in the absence of clinical suspicion for malignancy appears to have diminished benefit in the setting of benign preoperative indications. Omitting this traditional practice in patients with benign surgical indications may positively impact health care costs without compromising quality of care.
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
137. Evaluation of novel formula of PSA, age, prostate volume, and race in predicting positive prostate biopsy findings.
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Patel S, Issa MM, and El-Galley R
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- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Biopsy, Humans, Male, Mathematics, Middle Aged, Organ Size, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Black or African American, Prostate pathology, Prostate-Specific Antigen blood, Prostatic Neoplasms blood, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, White People
- Abstract
Objective: To develop a formula that incorporates age, prostate volume, race, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level into a single score for prostate cancer detection., Materials and Methods: We developed a PSA-age volume (AV) score by multiplying the patient age by the prostate volume and dividing it by the PSA level. The PSA-AV was developed using 1000 prostate biopsy specimens and was validated on 318 internal and 4406 external biopsy specimens., Results: We analyzed 1000 biopsy specimens (mean age 63 ± 8 years, 63% white and 35% black, mean PSA 6.8 ± 4 ng/mL, mean prostate volume 41 ± 18 cm(3), mean PSA-AV 485 ± 304). Of the 1000 biopsy specimens, 556 (55.6%) had positive findings. A lower PSA-AV score correlated with a greater cancer risk (R(2) = 0.91). A PSA-AV score of 700 had a sensitivity and specificity of 87% and 35%, respectively. These values matched or exceeded the sensitivity and specificity for age-adjusted PSA level and a PSA cutoff of 4 ng/mL. Compared with using the age-adjusted PSA level, using a score of 700 increased the number of biopsies by 64 and detected 62 more cancers. Using a PSA-AV cutoff of 700, rather than a PSA cutoff of 4 ng/mL, led to 16 fewer biopsies with 7 additional cancers detected. Our data were internally and externally validated., Conclusion: According to our data, a PSA-AV score has shown to be a useful formula for predicting positive biopsy findings. A PSA-AV score of 700 is useful in ruling out cancer in younger patients and patients with small prostates, and in ruling in cancer in older patients and patients with a large prostate., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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138. Guidance document for structured reporting of diuresis renography.
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Taylor AT, Blaufox MD, De Palma D, Dubovsky EV, Erbaş B, Eskild-Jensen A, Frøkiær J, Issa MM, Piepsz A, and Prigent A
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- Adult, Child, Communication, Flank Pain etiology, Humans, Infant, Quality Control, Radioisotope Renography adverse effects, Radioisotope Renography standards, Regional Blood Flow, Reproducibility of Results, Risk, Diuresis, Documentation, Radioisotope Renography methods, Research Design standards
- Abstract
This Guidance Document for structured reporting of diuresis renography in adults was developed by the International Scientific Committee of Radionuclides in Nephro-urology (ISCORN; http://www.iscorn.org). ISCORN chose diuresis renography for its first structured report Guidance Document because suspected obstruction is the most common reason for referral, most radionuclide renal studies are conducted at institutions that perform fewer than 3 studies per week, and a large percentage of studies are interpreted by physicians with limited training in nuclear medicine. Ten panelists were asked to categorize specific reporting elements as essential, recommended, optional (without sufficient data to support a higher ranking), and unnecessary (does not contribute to scan interpretation or quality assurance). The final document was developed through an iterative series of comments and questionnaires with a majority vote required to place an element in a specific category. The Guidance Document recommends a reporting structure organized into indications, clinical history, study procedure, findings and impression and specifies the elements considered essential or recommended in each category. The Guidance Document is not intended to be restrictive but, rather, to provide a basic structure and rationale so that the diuresis renography report will: (1) communicate the results to the referring physician in a clear and concise manner designed to optimize patient care; (2) contain the essential elements required to evaluate and interpret the study; (3) clearly document the technical components of the study necessary for accountability, quality assurance and reimbursement; and (4) encourage clinical research by facilitating better comparison and extrapolation of results between institutions., (Copyright © 2012. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
139. Tubulocystic carcinoma of the kidney: a case report of natural history and long-term follow-up.
- Author
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Moses KA, Decaro JJ, Osunkoya AO, and Issa MM
- Subjects
- Aged, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Kidney Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Kidney Neoplasms metabolism, Kidney Neoplasms physiopathology, Male, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Kidney Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Tubulocystic carcinoma (TC) is a rare primary renal tumor that has been recently described in the pathology literature. Formerly termed low-grade collecting duct carcinoma, further molecular analysis has shown TC to be a distinct entity that is separate from the more aggressive collecting duct carcinoma. Previous series have described the microscopic and immunohistochemical features of this tumor. We describe the natural history of this tumor in a patient who was followed with active surveillance for several years and then underwent partial nephrectomy. Long-term follow-up has shown no evidence of disease. A review of the pertinent literature is performed.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
140. Increased low density lipoprotein and increased likelihood of positive prostate biopsy in black americans.
- Author
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Moses KA, Abd TT, Goodman M, Hsiao W, Hall JA, Marshall FF, Petros JA, and Issa MM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Black or African American, Lipoproteins, LDL blood, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms blood, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: Differences in prostate cancer incidence, grade and stage at diagnosis, and survival in black vs nonblack men are well documented. Recent studies indicate that lipids may have a role in oncogenesis, including that of prostate cancer. We investigated the relationship between circulating lipids in black and nonblack patients, and newly diagnosed prostate cancer., Materials and Methods: The study population included consecutive patients who underwent prostate biopsy for increased prostate specific antigen and/or abnormal digital rectal examination at Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Age, race, prostate specific antigen, prostate volume, body mass index, family history, high and low density lipoprotein, triglyceride and cholesterol lowering medications were included in data analysis., Results: A total of 1,775 men with complete information were included in data analysis. A total of 521 black and 451 white men had positive biopsies. Using 100 mg/dl or less as the referent the adjusted OR reflecting the association of low density lipoprotein and prostate cancer diagnosis in black men was 1.49 (95% CI 1.04-2.13, p = 0.031), 1.51 (95% CI 0.96-2.39, p = 0.076) and 3.24 (95% CI 1.59-6.92, p = 0.002) for low density lipoprotein greater than 100 to 130, greater than 130 to 160 and greater than 160 mg/dl, respectively. Corresponding results in nonblack men showed no significant association., Conclusions: Increased serum low density lipoprotein is associated with an increased likelihood of prostate cancer diagnosis in black men but not in nonblack men. This association is strongest in the highest low density lipoprotein risk category. The reasons for the racial differences are unknown but may include genetic, dietary or other environmental factors.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
141. The utilization of Gleason grade as the primary criterion for ordering nuclear bone scan in newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients.
- Author
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Ritenour CW, Abbott JT, Goodman M, Alazraki N, Marshall FF, and Issa MM
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Biomarkers, Tumor, Bone Neoplasms diagnosis, Bone Neoplasms secondary, Bone and Bones diagnostic imaging, Decision Making, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radionuclide Imaging, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasm Staging methods, Prostate-Specific Antigen analysis, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Utilization of nuclear bone scans for staging newly diagnosed prostate cancer has decreased dramatically due to PSA-driven stage migration. The current criteria for performing bone scans are based on limited historical data. This study evaluates serum PSA and Gleason grade in predicting positive scans in a contemporary large series of newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients. Eight hundred consecutive cases of newly diagnosed prostate cancer over a 64-month period underwent a staging nuclear scan. All subjects had histologically confirmed cancer. The relationship between PSA, Gleason grade, and bone scan was examined by calculating series of crude, stratified, and adjusted odds ratios with corresponding 95% confidence intervals. Four percent (32/800) of all bone scans were positive. This proportion was significantly lower in patients with Gleason score
or=8 (18.8%, p < 0.001). Among patients with Gleason score 30 ng/ml compared to or=8, the rate was significantly higher (27.9 vs. 0%) when PSA was >10 ng/ml compared to 30 ng/ml. However, for patients with a high Gleason score (8-10), we recommend a bone scan if the PSA is >10 ng/ml. - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
142. Association between HIV status and positive prostate biopsy in a study of US veterans.
- Author
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Hsiao W, Anastasia K, Hall J, Goodman M, Rimland D, Ritenour CW, and Issa MM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, United States, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections epidemiology, Prostatic Neoplasms complications, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
It is estimated that 1.2 million Americans are infected with HIV. With advances in treatment and improved survival, HIV-positive patients are increasingly reaching an age when prostate cancer becomes a health issue. While there have been some reports in the literature reporting lower incidence of prostate cancer in HIV population cohorts, these studies have focused on younger populations, where we expect a lower incidence of prostate cancer. Our study involves patients over a 5.5 year period from a busy referral Veterans Medical Center referred to our urology clinic with either elevated PSA or abnormal DRE. Of these patients referred to our clinic, there is a markedly higher rate of prostate cancer in HIV patients when compared to our HIV-negative or HIV-unknown population. Though one may surmise a referral bias, in our highly regulated system, we use identical referral criterion for both HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients. Though this is a study with admittedly limited numbers, we believe this report is important because it is one of the first studies to address prostate cancer in a older cohort of patients who are referred because of suspicion for prostate cancer.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
143. Comparative analysis of alpha-blocker utilization in combination with 5-alpha reductase inhibitors for enlarged prostate in a managed care setting among Medicare-aged men.
- Author
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Issa MM, Lin PJ, Eaddy MT, Shah MB, and Davis EA
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Drug Therapy, Combination, Dutasteride, Humans, Male, Managed Care Programs, Medicare, Prostatic Hyperplasia enzymology, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, United States, 5-alpha Reductase Inhibitors, Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists therapeutic use, Azasteroids therapeutic use, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Finasteride therapeutic use, Prostatic Hyperplasia drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the likelihood of alpha-adrenergic antagonist (alpha-blocker) discontinuation in combination with dutasteride or finasteride among patients aged > or =65 years with enlarged prostate., Method: This retrospective analysis used 2003-2006 data representing more than 30 million managed care members. Medical/pharmacy claims were used to select patients, matched 1:1 using propensity scoring. The proportion remaining on alpha-blocker therapy more than 12 months and time to discontinuation were compared between groups, controlling for covariates using survival analysis., Results: The matched sample included 1674 patients. Alpha-blocker therapy discontinuation was observed at 90 days (86.9% dutasteride patients and 91.8% finasteride patients remained on alpha-blocker therapy). After 12 months, more dutasteride patients discontinued (38.1% remained) alpha-blocker therapy than finasteride patients (56.3% remained)., Conclusions: Patients discontinued alpha-blocker therapy as early as 3 months. Those taking dutasteride were 64% more likely to discontinue alpha-blocker therapy than patients taking finasteride. Dutasteride's impact on discontinuation may have important implications and should be examined further.
- Published
- 2008
144. A large retrospective analysis of acute urinary retention and prostate-related surgery in BPH patients treated with 5-alpha reductase inhibitors: dutasteride versus finasteride.
- Author
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Issa MM, Runken MC, Grogg AL, and Shah MB
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Age Distribution, Aged, Dutasteride, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Managed Care Programs, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Probability, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms complications, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Sensitivity and Specificity, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Urinary Retention etiology, Urodynamics, Azasteroids therapeutic use, Finasteride therapeutic use, Prostatic Neoplasms drug therapy, Urinary Retention epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the rates of acute urinary retention (AUR) and surgery after initiating 5-alpha reductase inhibitor (5ARI) therapy and to compare the 2 currently available 5ARIs, dutasteride and finasteride, in a real-world, managed care setting. This study constitutes the first direct comparison of therapeutic outcome between a mono 5ARI (finasteride) and a dual 5ARI (dutasteride)., Methods: This is a retrospective descriptive and comparative analysis of the rates of AUR and prostate surgery in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) treated with 5ARI therapy, either dutasteride or finasteride. Data were obtained from the PharMetrics Integrated Medical and Pharmaceutical Database (PIMPD) (Watertown, Mass) during a 6-year period. The PIMPD is a large national healthcare database that represents a total of 85 managed health plans and covers more than 45 million patients. The data analysis included all patients aged 50 years or older diagnosed with BPH who were treated with 5ARIs (dutasteride 0.5 mg/day or finasteride 5 mg/day) for up to 12 months during the 6-year period of January 1, 1999, to March 1, 2005. Patients meeting the selection criteria were evaluated for a total of 12 months with regard to the likelihood of experiencing AUR or prostate-related surgery., Results: After 5 months of 5ARI therapy, the rate of AUR during months 5 to 12 was found to be significantly lower in the dutasteride group compared with the finasteride group (5.3% vs 8.3%). After controlling for background covariates, dutasteride-treated patients were 49.1% less likely to experience AUR than patients treated with finasteride (P = .0207). Patients treated with dutasteride were also less likely to undergo prostate-related surgery, with 1.4% of dutasteride treated patients and 3.4% of patients receiving finasteride undergoing surgery; differences in surgery rates, however, were not statistically significant (P = .0745), even after controlling for background covariates. CONCLUSTION: Although the 2 drugs, dutasteride and finasteride, belong to the same category of 5ARIs, this large retrospective multivariate analysis potentially indicates differences in therapeutic outcomes. In this study, patients treated with dutasteride were less likely to experience AUR and demonstrated a trend toward being less likely to experience surgery than patients treated with finasteride.
- Published
- 2007
145. Medical therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia--present and future impact.
- Author
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Issa MM and Regan TS
- Subjects
- Aged, Enzyme Inhibitors economics, Forecasting, Health Care Costs, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prostatectomy economics, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Hyperplasia epidemiology, Prostatic Hyperplasia pathology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, United States, Urinary Retention drug therapy, Urinary Retention surgery, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Managed Care Programs economics, Prostatic Hyperplasia drug therapy, Prostatic Hyperplasia economics
- Abstract
The purpose of this manuscript is to provide clinicians, health plan decision makers, and policy makers with highlights of key findings pertaining to our current understanding of the condition of enlarged prostate (EP) from a managed care perspective. This includes a brief discussion regarding the prevalence and economic burden of EP, followed by a review of clinical characteristics and pathophysiology, with the final section on treatment approaches with a focus on pharmacologic options. This supplement is not intended to be a comprehensive review of EP, because many review articles on this subject are available elsewhere. This manuscript does, however, serve to introduce 3 additional manuscripts contained within this supplement. The first article provides the readers with a real-world comparison of dutasteride and finasteride relative to acute urinary retention and surgery attenuation rates. The second article investigates differences in discontinuation rates of alpha blockers when used in combination with dutasteride or finasteride. The last article addresses the cost implications associated with dutasteride and finasteride therapy. All 3 articles represent data from a naturalistic, managed care population. This supplement is intended to assist managed care formulary decision makers in evaluating key clinical and economic data which could help to differentiate dutasteride and finasteride. Although the information presented does not prove superiority of either product, it will answer some important questions and raise some important issues beyond ingredient cost.
- Published
- 2007
146. Initial experience with the radiotracer anti-1-amino-3-18F-fluorocyclobutane-1-carboxylic acid with PET/CT in prostate carcinoma.
- Author
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Schuster DM, Votaw JR, Nieh PT, Yu W, Nye JA, Master V, Bowman FD, Issa MM, and Goodman MM
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Lymphatic Metastasis, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Metastasis, Positron-Emission Tomography instrumentation, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Radiometry, Recurrence, Time Factors, Tomography, X-Ray Computed instrumentation, Carboxylic Acids, Cyclobutanes, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Conventional imaging techniques have serious limitations in the detection, staging, and restaging of prostate carcinoma. Anti-1-amino-3-(18)F-fluorocyclobutane-1-carboxylic acid (anti-(18)F-FACBC)is a synthetic l-leucine analog that has excellent in vitro uptake within the DU-145 prostate carcinoma cell line and orthotopically implanted prostate tumor in nude rats. There is little renal excretion compared with (18)F-FDG. The present study examines anti-(18)F-FACBC uptake in patients with newly diagnosed and recurrent prostate carcinoma., Methods: Fifteen patients with a recent diagnosis of prostate carcinoma (n = 9) or suspected recurrence (n = 6) underwent 65-min dynamic PET/CT of the pelvis after intravenous injection of 300-410 MBq anti-(18)F-FACBC followed by static body images. Each study was evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively. Maximum standardized uptake values were recorded in the prostate or prostate bed, and within lymph nodes at 4.5 min (early) and 20 min (delayed), and correlated with clinical, imaging and pathologic follow-up. Time-activity curves were also generated for benign and malignant tissue., Results: In the 8 patients with newly diagnosed prostate carcinoma who underwent dynamic scanning, visual analysis correctly identified the presence or absence of focal neoplastic involvement in 40 of 48 prostate sextants. Pelvic nodal status correlated with anti-(18)F-FACBC findings in 7 of 9 patients and was indeterminate in 2 of 9. In all 4 patients in whom there was proven recurrence, visual analysis was successful in identifying disease (1 prostate bed, 3 extraprostatic). In 3 of these patients, (111)In-capromab-pendetide had no significant uptake at nodal and skeletal foci. Malignant lymph node uptake in both the staging and restaging patients was significantly higher than benign nodal uptake. Though uptake faded with time, in all 6 patients with either lymph node metastases or recurrent prostate bed carcinoma, there was intense persistent uptake at 65 min., Conclusion: Anti-(18)F-FACBC is a promising radiotracer for imaging prostate carcinoma. Radiotracer uptake was demonstrated in primary and metastatic disease. Future research should investigate the mechanism of radiotracer uptake in normal and pathologic tissue and develop a clinical imaging strategy for initial staging and restaging.
- Published
- 2007
147. Comparison of camera-based 99mTc-MAG3 and 24-hour creatinine clearances for evaluation of kidney function.
- Author
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Esteves FP, Halkar RK, Issa MM, Grant S, and Taylor A
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Kidney Diseases diagnostic imaging, Kidney Transplantation, Male, Middle Aged, Radionuclide Imaging, Retrospective Studies, Tissue Donors, Creatinine metabolism, Kidney diagnostic imaging, Kidney physiology, Radiopharmaceuticals, Technetium Tc 99m Mertiatide
- Abstract
Objective: The 24-hour creatinine clearance is the standard clinical technique for measuring kidney function; however, this measurement is cumbersome and inconvenient for patients. We hypothesized that a camera-based technetium-99m mercaptoacetyltriglycine (MAG3) clearance obtained simultaneously with a standard MAG3 scan would correlate well with the 24-hour creatinine clearance and could serve as a simple marker of kidney function., Materials and Methods: Data were obtained from a retrospective analysis of 28 patients with varying degrees of kidney dysfunction and 85 subjects evaluated for kidney donation. The MAG3 clearance was calculated using a camera-based technique without blood or urine sampling. The creatinine clearance was measured using the plasma creatinine and a 24-hour urine collection. The MAG3 and creatinine clearances were corrected for body surface area, and clearance values in healthy subjects and patients were compared using the paired Student's t test. The linear association between the MAG3 and creatinine clearances was expressed by Pearson's correlation coefficient., Results: The mean MAG3 clearance in the potential kidney donors was 321 +/- 95 mL/min/1.73 m2 (95% CI, 171-546 mL/min/1.73 m2), significantly higher than the mean creatinine clearance of 152 +/- 51 mL/min/1.73 m2 (79-278 mL/min/1.73 m2, p < 0.001). The mean MAG3 clearance in patients was 153 +/- 70 mL/min/1.73 m2 (32-316 mL/min/1.73 m2) and was also significantly higher than the mean creatinine clearance of 74 +/- 36 mL/min/1.73 m2 (21-138 mL/min/1.73 m2, p < 0.001). The ratio of the mean creatinine clearance to the mean MAG3 clearance was essentially the same for volunteers and patients, 0.47 and 0.48, respectively. The Pearson's correlation between the MAG3 and creatinine clearances was 0.80 (0.72-0.86)., Conclusion: The camera-based 99mTc-MAG3 clearance correlates well with the 24-hour creatinine clearance and can provide a simple and convenient index of kidney function.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. An assessment of the diagnosed prevalence of diseases in men 50 years of age or older.
- Author
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Issa MM, Fenter TC, Black L, Grogg AL, and Kruep EJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, United States, Disease classification, Epidemiologic Studies
- Abstract
Objective: A lack of focus on certain men's health problems has led to significant morbidity and mortality in aging men. Managed care must begin to focus on the conditions that are most prevalent in this fast-growing population in an effort to improve the quality of care. To assist in achieving this goal, a naturalistic retrospective study assessing the prevalence of the 10 leading disorders in men older than the age of 50 was conducted, with an additional focus on men eligible for Medicare., Methods: Claims data were obtained from the Integrated Health Care Information Solutions National Managed Care Benchmark database (Waltham, Mass), that includes data from 30 health plans covering more than 25 million lives, and from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, representing men from a 5% random sample of Medicare-eligible patients. Men older than 50 years of age were included in the study. The prevalence of all diseases was determined in the 2003 calendar year for each population. Prevalence was calculated by dividing the number of diagnosed cases of a disease by the total person-time observations within the 2003 period., Results: The results indicate that cardiovascular (ie, coronary artery disease [CAD], hypertension, and arrhythmias), urological (ie, enlarged prostate and prostate cancer), and musculoskeletal disorders (ie, osteoarthritis and bursitis) comprise 70% of the 10 leading diseases. CAD and hypertension ranked first and second across all age categories, whereas enlarged prostate ranked fourth. In men older than 50, diabetes ranked third, whereas cataracts ranked third in Medicare-eligible men., Conclusion: The diseases identified in this study have the potential to cause significant clinical and economic implications when poorly treated or undertreated. Therefore, there is a need to institute early treatment for these conditions before they progress and require more extensive and costly interventions.
- Published
- 2006
149. Clinical and economic outcomes in patients treated for enlarged prostate.
- Author
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Naslund MJ, Issa MM, Grogg AL, Eaddy MT, and Black L
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Aged, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prostatic Hyperplasia surgery, Retrospective Studies, Surgical Procedures, Operative statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, 3-Oxo-5-alpha-Steroid 4-Dehydrogenase therapeutic use, Prostatic Hyperplasia drug therapy, Treatment Outcome, Urinary Retention chemically induced
- Abstract
Background: Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), also referred to as enlarged prostate, is a highly prevalent condition in men aged 50 years or older. It is a progressive disease with significant morbidity from complications., Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the likelihood of having acute urinary retention (AUR) and prostate surgery after initiating therapy with an alpha blocker or 5-alpha reductase inhibitor in a real-world setting., Study Design: This was a retrospective study of patients who were treated for BPH between January 1, 2003, and November 30, 2003, in a large, national managed care claims database. Outcomes measures of interest included rate of AUR, prostate surgery, and surgical complications., Results: There were 2959 patient records with a diagnosis of BPH who were taking prostate medications in the database. Eighty-nine percent of patients were receiving alpha blocker therapy, whereas 11% of patients were receiving 5-alpha reductase inhibitors. Overall, the 1-year AUR rate was 12.1%, and the prostate surgery rate was 5.8%. Patients who initiated 5-alpha reductase inhibitor therapy only were less likely to have AUR or surgery compared with patients taking alpha blockers, although surgical differences did not reach statistical significance (P = .0576). Overall, the surgical complication rate was 49.4%, and the rate of AUR within 180 days of prostate surgery was 30.6%. Rates of prostate surgery, AUR, and surgical complications all increased with age., Conclusion: Patients receiving 5-alpha reductase inhibitor therapy alone were less likely to have AUR compared with patients receiving alpha blockers and tended to be less likely to have surgery (P = .054).
- Published
- 2006
150. The evolution of laser therapy in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia.
- Author
-
Issa MM
- Abstract
The 2 basic principles of laser therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), based on the final tissue effect, are laser vaporization and laser coagulation. In laser vaporization techniques, higher-density laser thermal energy is used; effects range from complete tissue vaporization to incision, resection, or enucleation of the obstructing prostatic tissue. Interstitial laser coagulation (ILC) requires lower therapeutic temperatures. The urethral preservation and lack of tissue evaporation/resection with ILC make this treatment different from conventional transurethral free-beam laser prostatectomy. The Indigo(R) Optima Laser treatment system is the most widely used ILC system. Unlike other BPH laser therapies, Indigo ILC can be satisfactorily performed using pure local anesthesia in an office or outpatient setting. Favorable treatment outcomes are seen in a large percentage of patients, with minimal adverse events. Such favorable results depend on proper surgical technique and operator experience.
- Published
- 2005
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