276 results on '"TURNER JH"'
Search Results
2. Prospective (153)Sm-EDTMP therapy dosimetry by whole body scintigraphy
- Author
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Turner, JH, Cameron, PJ, Klemp, PF, and Martindale, AA
- Published
- 1999
3. Standard Operating Procedure for Prospective Individualised Dosimetry for [131] I-rituximab Radioimmunotherapy of Non-Hodgkin′s Lymphoma
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Calais Pj and Turner Jh
- Subjects
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,I-131 rituximab ,medicine.medical_treatment ,immune system diseases ,Dosimetry ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,CD20 ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma ,Radioimmunotherapy ,biology.protein ,Original Article ,Rituximab ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Standard operating procedure ,standard operating procedure ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Radioimmunotherapy (RIT) is an attractive therapy for non-Hodgkin′s lymphoma (NHL) as it allows targeted tumor irradiation which provides a cytotoxic effect significantly greater than that of the immune-mediated effects of a non-radioactive, or ′cold′, antibody alone. Anti-CD20 antibodies such as rituximab are ideal for RIT, as not only is it easily iodinated, but the CD20 antigen is found on more than 95% of B-cell NHL. A standard operating procedure (SOP) has been formulated for personalized prospective dosimetry for safe, effective outpatient 131 I-rituximab RIT of NHL. Over five years, experience of treatment of outpatients with 131 I-rituximab was analyzed with respect to critical organ radiation dose in patients and radiation exposure of their carers. This radiation safety methodology has been refined; and offers the potential for safe, practical application to outpatient 131 I-rituximab RIT of lymphoma in general and in developing countries in particular. Given endorsement and sanction of this SOP by local regulatory authorities the personalized dosimetry paradigm will facilitate incorporation of RIT into the routine clinical practice of therapeutic nuclear oncology worldwide.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Defining Pharmacokinetics for Individual Patient Dosimetry in Routine Radiopeptide and Radioimmunotherapy of Cancer: Australian Experience
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Turner Jh
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Combination therapy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pharmacokinetics ,Neoplasms ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Dosimetry ,Medical physics ,Radioisotopes ,Pharmacology ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Australia ,Cancer ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,Radioimmunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Radiation therapy ,Isotope Labeling ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business - Abstract
Determination of individual pharmacokinetics in patients undergoing radiopharmaceutical therapy is essential to define critical normal organ dosimetry. Review of a 20 year single institution experience demonstrates practical methodology for routinely characterising pharmacokinetics in each patient and calculating safe, effective therapeutic activities predicated upon prescribed radiation absorbed doses to the critical organs. In particular the results achieved in over 100 unselected consecutive clinic patients treated with (131)I-rituximab radioimmunotherapy for relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkins lymphoma have matched the ORR of 75% and CR 50% achieved in formal phase II clinical trial. The low level of myelotoxicity was attributed to prospective dosimetry in each patient and prescribed dose of 0.75 Gy to whole body. Radiopeptide therapy of progressive neuroendocrine tumours with (177)Lu-octreotate, illustrates application of practical dosimetry using retrospective quantitative imaging to define individual pharmacokinetics. Further challenges of multimodality combination therapy using radionuclide cocktails, chemotherapy and antivascular therapy, which will perturb pharmacokinetics, will require creative dosimetric methodology for continued safe, effective clinical practice of therapeutic nuclear oncology.
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- 2009
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5. Personalized dosimetry of 131I-rituximab radioimmunotherapy of non-hodgkin lymphoma defined by pharmacokinetics in bone marrow and blood
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Jan Boucek and Turner Jh
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiation Dosage ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived ,Pharmacokinetics ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Dosimetry ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Precision Medicine ,Radiometry ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Aged, 80 and over ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,business.industry ,Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Radioimmunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Absorbed dose ,Rituximab ,Female ,Bone marrow ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Blood sampling ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To report a comparison of SPECT/CT technique with standard blood-based dosimetry methodology in a cohort of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) patients treated with 131I-rituximab anti-CD20 chimeric monoclonal antibody.Red marrow uptake was measured directly using serial quantitative whole-body imaging in conjunction with SPECT/CT in a cohort of 23 patients undergoing routine 131I-rituximab radioimmunotherapy of NHL. Absorbed dose measurements were then compared with radiation doses calculated using standard peripheral blood counting methodology.Activity clearance from whole body of 88.7 hours measured by imaging 131I-rituximab was significantly slower (p0.001) than the mean effective half-life clearance of 60.8 hours calculated from the sampling peripheral blood. The mean activity concentrations in bone marrow measured using SPECT/CT, and by blood sampling, extrapolated to the time of administration, were, however, concordant. The absorbed self-dose in red marrow, measured using imaging, was 1.02 Gy compared with the dose (0.81 Gy) calculated from blood sampling. Neutrophil toxicity correlated with absorbed dose by SPECT/CT imaging (p=0.01), whereas the blood sampling method demonstrated no correlation with any parameters of hematological toxicity.Radiation dose to red marrow from 131I-rituximab is inherently underestimated by standard indirect peripheral blood counting methods. Personalized marrow dosimetry by quantitative gamma imaging more accurately predicts of hemopoietic myelotoxicity by direct measurement of the bone marrow activity concentration of 131I-rituximab.
- Published
- 2013
6. Pancreatic vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-oma as a cause of secretory diarrhoea
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Brennan Ba, Cullingford Gl, Turner Jh, Masel Sl, and Cullen Dj
- Subjects
Adult ,Diarrhea ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pancreatic disease ,Urinary system ,Vasoactive intestinal peptide ,Octreotide ,Gastroenterology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Pancreatectomy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,VIPoma ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Secretory diarrhoea ,medicine.disease ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Vipoma ,Pancreas ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,medicine.drug ,Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide - Abstract
A 42-year-old woman presented with a 4-year history of worsening diarrhoea that was watery, profuse and confirmed to be secretory in nature. She had tested positive for phenolphthalein on urinary laxative screening but continued to deny laxative usage. Her vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) level was subsequently found to be markedly elevated. Despite a normal abdominal ultrasound, a computed tomography scan revealed a 5-cm pancreatic tail mass. Octreotide scanning was used to exclude metastatic disease and she went on to have surgical removal of a localized pancreatic vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-oma which resulted in the complete resolution of her diarrhoea.
- Published
- 2000
7. Orthotopic xenografts of human melanoma and colonic and ovarian carcinoma in sheep to evaluate radioimmunotherapy
- Author
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Turner, JH, primary, Rose, AH, additional, Glancy, RJ, additional, and Penhale, WJ, additional
- Published
- 1998
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8. CYCLOSPORINE A IMMUNOSUPPRESSION IN SHEEP WITH RESPONSE ENHANCEMENT BY CONCOMITANT KETOCONAZOLE
- Author
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O'Donoghue, HL, primary, Penhale, WJ, additional, Manning, LS, additional, Reynoldson, JA, additional, and Turner, JH, additional
- Published
- 1996
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9. Iodine-131 Rituximab Radioimmunotherapy with BEAM Conditioning and Autologous Stem Cell Transplant Salvage Therapy for Relapsed/Refractory Aggressive Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.
- Author
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Kruger PC, Cooney JP, and Turner JH
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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10. Aggressive sinonasal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.
- Author
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Turner JH, Loyo M, and Lin SY
- Published
- 2012
11. Head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma: a critical analysis of population-based incidence and survival data.
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Turner JH and Richmon JD
- Published
- 2011
12. Observation of Low-Energyμ+Emission from Solid Surfaces
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J. L. Beveridge, Allen P. Mills, Robert F. Kiefl, C. J. Oram, Turner Jh, K. R. Kendall, Crane Ws, J. B. Warren, Rupaal As, and D. R. Harshman
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Quantitative Biology::Subcellular Processes ,Low energy ,Muon ,Materials science ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Solid surface ,Analytical chemistry ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Mathematics::General Topology ,General Physics and Astronomy ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Quartz - Abstract
Etude de la distribution d'energie de muons de faible energie transmis a travers de minces solides moderateurs
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- 1986
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13. Continuous imaging of regional myocardial blood flow in dogs using krypton-81m
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Turner Jh, Evans Tr, Raphael Mj, Terry Jones, Andrew P. Selwyn, and Lavender Jp
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary artery occlusion ,Physiology ,Aortic root ,chemistry.chemical_element ,law.invention ,Dogs ,law ,Coronary Circulation ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Medical imaging ,Animals ,Medicine ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Gamma camera ,Radioisotopes ,business.industry ,Krypton ,Technetium ,Blood flow ,Constriction ,Coronary Vessels ,chemistry ,Coronary occlusion ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
The unique physical properties of the freely diffusible gas krypton-81 m allowed continuous imaging of regional myocardial blood flow in dogs when infused into the aortic root. Regional changes in myocardial perfusion related to transient coronary artery occlusion were demonstrated both as high resolution gamma camera images and as a quantitative strip chart record.
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- 1976
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14. Methodology of B‐Scan Sonar Cephalometry with Electronic Calipers and Correlation with Fetal Birth Weight
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Sabbagha Re and Turner Jh
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Fetus ,business.industry ,Cephalometry ,Birth weight ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,Dentistry ,Calipers ,business ,Sonar - Published
- 1972
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15. Mucocele formation under pedicled nasoseptal flap.
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Vaezeafshar R, Hwang PH, Harsh G, and Turner JH
- Published
- 2012
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16. Brain scan in cerebral ischemia. An experimental model in the rat
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Turner Jh
- Subjects
Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Nervous system ,Male ,business.industry ,Experimental model ,Central nervous system ,Ischemia ,Technetium ,medicine.disease ,Isotopes of technetium ,Rats ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuroimaging ,Technetium-99 ,medicine ,Animals ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Stroke - Abstract
A rapid embolic method for consistent induction of stroke in the rat is described. Brain scans were performed using a micro-pinhole collimator system, and the value of the model for studies in localization of radiopharmaceuticals in cerebral ischemia is demonstrated.
- Published
- 1975
17. Generation of slow positive muons from solid rare-gas moderators
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J. L. Beveridge, D. R. Harshman, Morris Gd, Rupaal As, Turner Jh, J. B. Warren, K. R. Kendall, Masayoshi Senba, and Allen P. Mills
- Subjects
Physics ,Neon ,Argon ,Muon ,Xenon ,chemistry ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Antimatter ,Krypton ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Atomic physics ,Spectral line ,Lepton - Abstract
We observe the emission of slow positive muons (..mu../sup +/) from solid neon, argon, krypton, and xenon moderators exposed to a 4.2-MeV incident ..mu../sup +/ beam. The time-of-flight spectra for all of the targets studied exhibit a narrow distribution with no delayed component. Energy spectra obtained from the time-of-flight data indicate a maximum below approx.10 eV with a tail extending to higher energies. The data suggest a slowly thermalizing muon emission mechanism, implying a long diffusion length for low-energy ..mu../sup +/ in these solids. Of the targets measured, argon was observed to produce the highest yield (approx.10/sup -5/ slow ..mu../sup +/ per incident ..mu../sup +/), providing a useful flux for further experimentation.
- Published
- 1987
18. Psychoses, intracranial neoplasms, and genetics
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J. A. Buckwalter, Turner Jh, R. T. Soper, Raterman L, Knowler La, and H. H. Gamber
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Blood type ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Brain Neoplasms ,Mental Disorders ,Population ,Disease ,Mental health ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Psychotic Disorders ,ABO blood group system ,Blood Group Antigens ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical diagnosis ,business ,Psychiatry ,education ,Relevant information - Abstract
The nature of the association between the ABO blood groups and disease is being investigated in the population of the State of Iowa.1The demonstration of statistically significant associations between the ABO blood groups and several diseases suggests that the ABO blood groups may be a tool useful in investigation of genetic factors in still other disorders. This paper is a report of the findings in patients with psychoses and intracranial neoplasms (brain tumors). Materials and Methods The ABO blood types of the patients resident in Mount Pleasant and Independence Mental Health Institutes were determined by the research team, using a slide technique. The patient's blood type, diagnosis, and other relevant information abstracted from the patient's chart were recorded on punch cards. The diagnoses had previously been established by staff members of the Mental Health Institutes and were based upon the standard nomenclature of mental disorders recommended by the
- Published
- 1959
19. Secretion of beta-HCG from squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck.
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Turner JH, Ross H, and Richmon J
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- 2010
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20. Sub-Ångstrom Transmission Electron Microscopy at 300keV
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O’Keefe, MA, Nelson, EC, Turner, JH, and Thust, A
- Abstract
Sub-Ångstrom TEM to a resolution of 0.78Å has been demonstrated by the one-Ångstrom microscope (OÅM) project at the National Center for Electron Microscopy. The OÅM combines a modified CM300FEG-UT with computer software able to generate sub-Angstrom images from experimental image series.Sub-Ångstrom HREM is gaining in importance as researchers design and build artificially-structured nanomaterials such as semiconductor devices, ceramic coatings, and nanomachines. Commonly, such nanostructures include atoms with bond lengths shorter in projection than the point resolution of a mid-voltage HREM. in addition, image simulations have shown that structure determinations of defects such as dislocation cores require sub-Angstrom resolution, as will hold true for grain boundaries and other interfaces.Sub-Ångstrom microscopy with a transmission electron microscope requires meticulous attention to detail. As resolution is improved, resolution-limiting parameters need to be reduced. in particular, aberrations must be minimized, power supplies must be stabilized, and the microscope environment optimized to reduce acoustic and electromagnetic noise in addition to vibration.
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- 2001
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21. Reply to: Real-World Predictors of Dupilumab Prescription in Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis With Nasal Polyps.
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Dorismond C, Krysinski MR, Trivedi Y, Lubner RJ, Chandra RK, Chowdhury NI, and Turner JH
- Published
- 2025
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22. Mythos in the light of evolution.
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Maryanski A and Turner JH
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- Humans, Animals, Primates, Biological Evolution
- Abstract
This commentary adds elements of analysis from the new evolutionary sociology that might help to support the mythologic hypothesis. It discusses the likelihood of a more generalized processer rather than exactly evolved psychological mechanisms, the consequences of bottlenecks, and the importance of utilizing molecular, fossil, and primate data in the authors' research program.
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- 2025
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23. Nasal Mucus Cytokines Are Correlated with Spirometry Measures in CRS Patients with Comorbid Asthma.
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Lubner RJ, Dorismond C, Krysinski M, Li P, Chandra RK, Turner JH, Newcomb DC, Cahill KN, and Chowdhury NI
- Abstract
Key Points: CRS patients with asthma show differential nasal mucus cytokine signatures based on endotype. IL-7 concentration is positively associated with higher %FEV1 and %FVC in CRS patients with asthma., (© 2024 ARS‐AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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24. Theranostics, Advanced Cancer, and The Meaning of Life.
- Author
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Palliative Care methods, Palliative Care psychology, Theranostic Nanomedicine methods, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms mortality, Neoplasms psychology, Quality of Life
- Abstract
There is an unmet need to recognize and address the psychosocial and spiritual support of the rapidly growing population of cancer survivors living with advanced metastatic disease which is essentially incurable. Palliative chemotherapy may do more harm than good. The role of the physician in the provision of a supportive, compassionate relationship of mutual trust is critical in the exploration of spirituality and the meaning of life for each individual patient. The objective must be to enhance quality of life rather than prolong it at any cost. Nuclear physicians are now equipped to offer effective control of advanced metastatic cancer of prostate and neuroendocrine neoplasms without clinically evident toxicity. They also now have the potential to practice phronesis, and in so doing, to significantly ameliorate the quality of life of patients afflicted with these specific advanced cancers. During the time of prolonged symptom-free survival, these patients may be encouraged to find life's meaning and a peaceful acceptance of their inevitable demise.
- Published
- 2024
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25. Real-world predictors of dupilumab prescription in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps.
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Dorismond C, Krysinski MR, Trivedi Y, Lubner RJ, Chandra RK, Chowdhury NI, and Turner JH
- Abstract
Background: Despite increasing dupilumab use for chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP), little is known about the factors influencing its use in real-world practice. We aimed to identify factors that may predict dupilumab prescription in CRSwNP patients who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS)., Methods: A single-institution, retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent ESS for CRSwNP between 2015 and 2023 was conducted. Demographics, comorbidities, 22-item sinonasal outcome test (SNOT-22) scores, and dupilumab prescription date were extracted from patient records. Intraoperative nasal mucus cytokine levels were measured using a multiplex bead assay. Univariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors associated with dupilumab prescription, and multivariate logistic regression was used to adjust for surgery date., Results: A total of 299 CRSwNP patients were included, including seventy (23.4%) who were prescribed dupilumab postoperatively. Patients were more likely to be prescribed dupilumab if they had asthma (odds ratio [OR] 2.304), aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD, OR 3.375), elevated tissue eosinophils (OR 1.005), and higher 3-month postoperative SNOT-22 scores (OR 1.027). Patients prescribed dupilumab also had greater odds of having elevated mucus interleukin (IL)-5 (OR 1.128) and IL-13 (OR 1.213). When adjusting for surgery date, associated factors included: asthma (OR 2.444), AERD (OR 3.750), allergic rhinitis (OR 1.833), higher tissue eosinophils (OR 1.005), elevated 3-month SNOT-22 scores (OR 1.028), and higher IL-5 (OR 1.123) and IL-13 (OR 1.202) levels., Conclusion: Asthma, AERD, allergic rhinitis, and elevated tissue eosinophil, IL-5, and IL-13 levels are predictive of dupilumab prescription in CRSwNP patients. These may serve as clinical and inflammatory biomarkers and can aid in counseling patients about expected disease trajectory., (© 2024 ARS‐AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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26. Aging and frailty are associated with inflammatory endotypic shifts in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis.
- Author
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Krysinski MR, Dorismond C, Trivedi Y, Lubner R, Lopez AA, Rubel K, Chandra RK, Chowdhury NI, and Turner JH
- Abstract
Key Points: Frailty and aging are associated with a shift toward non-type 2 inflammation in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). Frailty-related shifts in sinonasal inflammatory mediators may be linked to biological senescence. Understanding the role of aging and frailty in CRS may have important treatment implications., (© 2024 ARS‐AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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27. Human-Artificial Intelligence Symbiotic Reporting for Theranostic Cancer Care.
- Author
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Turner JH
- Abstract
Reporting of diagnostic nuclear images in clinical cancer management is generally qualitative. Theranostic treatment with
177 Lu radioligands for prostate cancer and neuroendocrine tumors is routinely given as the same arbitrary fixed administered activity to every patient. Nuclear oncology, as currently practiced with177 Lu-prostate-specific membrane antigen and177 Lu peptide receptor radionuclide therapy, cannot, therefore, be characterized as personalized precision medicine. The evolution of artificial intelligence (AI) could change this "one-size-fits-all" approach to theranostics, through development of a symbiotic relationship with physicians. Combining quantitative data collection, collation, and analytic computing power of AI algorithms with the clinical expertise, empathy, and personal care of patients by their physician envisions a new paradigm in theranostic reporting for molecular imaging and radioligand treatment of cancer. Human-AI interaction will facilitate the compilation of a comprehensive, integrated nuclear medicine report. This holistic report would incorporate radiomics to quantitatively analyze diagnostic digital imaging and prospectively calculate the radiation absorbed dose to tumor and critical normal organs. The therapy activity could then be accurately prescribed to deliver a preordained, effective, tumoricidal radiation absorbed dose to tumor, while minimizing toxicity in the particular patient. Post-therapy quantitative imaging would then validate the actual dose delivered and sequential pre- and post-treatment dosimetry each cycle would allow individual dose prescription and monitoring over the entire course of theranostic treatment. Furthermore, the nuclear medicine report would use AI analysis to predict likely clinical outcome, predicated upon AI definition of tumor molecular biology, pathology, and genomics, correlated with clinical history and laboratory data. Such synergistic comprehensive reporting will enable self-assurance of the nuclear physician who will necessarily be deemed personally responsible and accountable for the theranostic clinical outcome. Paradoxically, AI may thus be expected to enhance the practice of phronesis by the nuclear physician and foster a truly empathic trusting relationship with the cancer patient.- Published
- 2024
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28. Theranostics: Timing is Everything.
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Neoplasms therapy, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Nuclear Medicine methods, Radiopharmaceuticals therapeutic use, Theranostic Nanomedicine methods, Time Factors, Precision Medicine methods
- Abstract
On stage, and in real life, timing is critical for success. Theranostic cancer care epitomizes the central role of timing in the evolution of efficacious molecular targeted radioligand therapy and its incorporation into routine clinical practice of oncology. Nuclear medicine has returned to its therapeutic roots, having been founded as a medical specialty, over three-quarters of a century ago, with radioiodine therapy of thyroid cancer. The very recent oncologist acceptance of
68 Ga/177 Lu/225 Ac-PSMA effectiveness in treating prostate cancer has re-established the role of the physician in nuclear medicine. This article addresses various important issues in respect of timing related to this resurgence. Training of the required new workforce in technical -omics expertise and physicianly virtues is an urgent priority. Precision in radioligand therapy requires definition of individual radiation absorbed dose (Gy) to tumor and to critical normal organs, preferably prospectively. It is time to abandon one-size-fits-all administration of fixed activities (GBq) in arbitrary cycle intervals and duration. The time has also come to design combination sequenced theranostic-immuno-chemotherapeutic approaches to metastatic cancer to address unmet needs, particularly in pancreatic carcinoma; exploiting the potential of new fibroblast activation protein inhibitor radioligands targeting the tumor microenvironment. Public perception of all things "nuclear," including nuclear medicine, has recently recovered from the general opprobrium and radiophobia of the last half-century. Nuclear is the new green. At last, there have arisen propitious circumstances for the future development of theranostics: The timing is right, now.- Published
- 2024
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29. Understanding Inflammatory Heterogeneity in NSAID-Exacerbated Respiratory Disease.
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Turner JH and Kato A
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- 2024
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30. Frailty is an independent predictor of postoperative rescue medication use after endoscopic sinus surgery.
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Rubel KE, Lopez A, Lubner RJ, Lee DL, Yancey K, Chandra RK, Chowdhury NI, and Turner JH
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- Humans, Male, Paranasal Sinuses surgery, Retrospective Studies, Sinusitis drug therapy, Sinusitis surgery, Quality of Life, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Adrenal Cortex Hormones administration & dosage, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Therapeutic Irrigation, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Frailty, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Rhinosinusitis drug therapy, Rhinosinusitis surgery, Endoscopy
- Abstract
Introduction: The modified five-item frailty index (mFI-5) is a validated risk stratification tool with the ability to predict adverse outcomes following surgery. In this study, we sought to use mFI-5 to assess the potential relationship between unhealthy aging and postoperative endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) outcomes., Methods: Patients who underwent sinus surgery at Vanderbilt between 2014 and 2018 were identified and assessed using the mFI-5, which is calculated based on the presence of five comorbidities: diabetes mellitus, hypertension requiring medication, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, and non-independent functional status. Multivariate regression analyses were performed to quantify the association of mFI-5 score on need for rescue oral antibiotics, oral steroids, and antibiotic irrigations within 1 year following ESS, adjusting for relevant potential confounders., Results: Four hundred and three patients met inclusion criteria. Within 6 months of surgery, 312 (77%) required rescue antibiotics, 243 (60%) required oral corticosteroids (OCS), and 31 (8%) initiated antibiotic irrigations. Increasing mFI-5 scores were significantly associated with higher postoperative use of rescue antibiotics (p < 0.0001), OCS (p = 0.032), and antibiotic irrigation (p < 0.0001). Frailty scores remained as an independent predictor of these outcomes after adjustment for age, polyp status, preoperative sinonasal outcomes test (SNOT-22) score, and revision surgery status., Conclusions: Modified frailty scores may be a useful clinical tool to predict the need for postoperative rescue medication use after ESS., (© 2024 ARS‐AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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31. Theranostic Innovation by Humane N-of-One Cancer Care in Real-World Patients.
- Author
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Compassionate Use Trials, Nuclear Medicine methods, Precision Medicine methods, Neoplasms therapy, Radiopharmaceuticals therapeutic use
- Abstract
Patients with relapsed or refractory metastatic cancer unresponsive to standard therapies have motivated nuclear physicians to develop innovative radioligands, precisely targeted to tumor molecular receptors, for effective treatment of specific advanced malignancies. Individual practitioners in departments of nuclear medicine across the world have performed first-in-human studies on compassionate patient usage N-of-One protocols. These physician-sponsored studies then evolved into early-phase clinical trials and obtained real-world data to demonstrate real-world evidence of effectiveness in prolonging survival and enhancing quality of life of many so-called "End-Stage" cancer patients. Virtually all the therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals in current clinical oncology have been discovered and developed into effective specific treatments of targetable cancers by individual doctors in the course of their hospital practice. Pharma industry was not involved until many years later when performance of mandated Phase 3 randomized controlled trials became necessary to achieve regulatory agency approval. This article traces the history of several novel theranostic agents developed from compassionate N-of-One studies by hospital physicians over the past 36 years. It acknowledges the collegiality and collaboration of individual nuclear medicine specialists, worldwide, in pioneering effective humane therapy of particular advanced cancers unresponsive to conventional treatments.
- Published
- 2024
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32. Particulate matter exposure is associated with increased inflammatory cytokines and eosinophils in chronic rhinosinusitis.
- Author
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Lubner RJ, Rubel K, Chandra RK, Turner JH, and Chowdhury NI
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Chronic Disease, Inflammation Mediators metabolism, Cytokines metabolism, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Eosinophils immunology, Eosinophils metabolism, Particulate Matter adverse effects, Rhinosinusitis etiology, Rhinosinusitis immunology
- Abstract
Background: Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is thought to result from complex interactions between the host immune system, microbiota, and environmental exposures. Currently, there is limited data regarding the impact of ambient particulate matter ≤2.5 μm in diameter (PM
2.5 ) in the pathogenesis of CRS, despite evidence linking PM2.5 to other respiratory diseases. We hypothesized that PM2.5 may result in differential cytokine patterns that could inform our mechanistic understanding of the effect of environmental factors on CRS., Methods: We conducted an analysis of data prospectively collected from 308 CRS patients undergoing endoscopic sinus surgery. Cytokines were quantified in intraoperative mucus specimens using a multiplex flow cytometric bead assay. Clinical and demographic data including zip codes were extracted and used to obtain tract-level income and rurality measures. A spatiotemporal machine learning model was used to estimate daily PM2.5 levels for the year prior to each patient's surgery date. Spearman correlations and regression analysis were performed to characterize the relationship between mucus cytokines and PM2.5. RESULTS: Several inflammatory cytokines including IL-2, IL-5/IL-13, IL-12, and 21 were significantly correlated with estimated average 6, 9, and 12-month preoperative PM2.5 levels. These relationships were maintained for most cytokines after adjusting for age, income, body mass index, rurality, polyps, asthma, and allergic rhinitis (AR) (p < .05). There were also higher odds of asthma (OR = 1.5, p = .01) and AR (OR = 1.48, p = .03) with increasing 12-month PM2.5 exposure. Higher tissue eosinophil counts were associated with increasing PM2.5 levels across multiple timeframes (p < .05)., Conclusions: Chronic PM2.5 exposure may be an independent risk factor for development of a mixed, type-2 dominant CRS inflammatory response., (© 2024 European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Development of parallel forms of a brief smell identification test useful for longitudinal testing.
- Author
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Moein ST, Sacan A, Pourrezaei K, Yan CH, Turner JH, Sharetts R, and Doty RL
- Subjects
- Humans, Smell, Odorants, ROC Curve, Olfaction Disorders diagnosis, COVID-19
- Abstract
Although there are numerous brief odor identification tests available for quantifying the ability to smell, none are available in multiple parallel forms that can be longitudinally administered without potential confounding from knowledge of prior test items. Moreover, empirical algorithms for establishing optimal test lengths have not been generally applied. In this study, we employed and compared eight machine learning algorithms to develop a set of four brief parallel smell tests employing items from the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test that optimally differentiated 100 COVID-19 patients from 132 healthy controls. Among the algorithms, linear discriminant analysis (LDA) achieved the best overall performance. The minimum number of odorant test items needed to differentiate smell loss accurately was identified as eight. We validated the sensitivity of the four developed tests, whose means and variances did not differ from one another (Bradley-Blackwood test), by sequential testing an independent group of 32 subjects that included persons with smell dysfunction not due to COVID-19. These eight-item tests clearly differentiated the olfactory compromised subjects from normosmics, with areas under the ROC curve ranging from 0.79 to 0.83. Each test was correlated with the overall UPSIT scores from which they were derived. These brief smell tests can be used separately or sequentially over multiple days in a variety of contexts where longitudinal olfactory testing is needed., (© 2023. The Psychonomic Society, Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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34. International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Sinonasal Tumors.
- Author
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Kuan EC, Wang EW, Adappa ND, Beswick DM, London NR Jr, Su SY, Wang MB, Abuzeid WM, Alexiev B, Alt JA, Antognoni P, Alonso-Basanta M, Batra PS, Bhayani M, Bell D, Bernal-Sprekelsen M, Betz CS, Blay JY, Bleier BS, Bonilla-Velez J, Callejas C, Carrau RL, Casiano RR, Castelnuovo P, Chandra RK, Chatzinakis V, Chen SB, Chiu AG, Choby G, Chowdhury NI, Citardi MJ, Cohen MA, Dagan R, Dalfino G, Dallan I, Dassi CS, de Almeida J, Dei Tos AP, DelGaudio JM, Ebert CS, El-Sayed IH, Eloy JA, Evans JJ, Fang CH, Farrell NF, Ferrari M, Fischbein N, Folbe A, Fokkens WJ, Fox MG, Lund VJ, Gallia GL, Gardner PA, Geltzeiler M, Georgalas C, Getz AE, Govindaraj S, Gray ST, Grayson JW, Gross BA, Grube JG, Guo R, Ha PK, Halderman AA, Hanna EY, Harvey RJ, Hernandez SC, Holtzman AL, Hopkins C, Huang Z, Huang Z, Humphreys IM, Hwang PH, Iloreta AM, Ishii M, Ivan ME, Jafari A, Kennedy DW, Khan M, Kimple AJ, Kingdom TT, Knisely A, Kuo YJ, Lal D, Lamarre ED, Lan MY, Le H, Lechner M, Lee NY, Lee JK, Lee VH, Levine CG, Lin JC, Lin DT, Lobo BC, Locke T, Luong AU, Magliocca KR, Markovic SN, Matnjani G, McKean EL, Meço C, Mendenhall WM, Michel L, Na'ara S, Nicolai P, Nuss DW, Nyquist GG, Oakley GM, Omura K, Orlandi RR, Otori N, Papagiannopoulos P, Patel ZM, Pfister DG, Phan J, Psaltis AJ, Rabinowitz MR, Ramanathan M Jr, Rimmer R, Rosen MR, Sanusi O, Sargi ZB, Schafhausen P, Schlosser RJ, Sedaghat AR, Senior BA, Shrivastava R, Sindwani R, Smith TL, Smith KA, Snyderman CH, Solares CA, Sreenath SB, Stamm A, Stölzel K, Sumer B, Surda P, Tajudeen BA, Thompson LDR, Thorp BD, Tong CCL, Tsang RK, Turner JH, Turri-Zanoni M, Udager AM, van Zele T, VanKoevering K, Welch KC, Wise SK, Witterick IJ, Won TB, Wong SN, Woodworth BA, Wormald PJ, Yao WC, Yeh CF, Zhou B, and Palmer JN
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Hypersensitivity, Head and Neck Neoplasms, Paranasal Sinus Neoplasms therapy, Paranasal Sinus Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Sinonasal neoplasms, whether benign and malignant, pose a significant challenge to clinicians and represent a model area for multidisciplinary collaboration in order to optimize patient care. The International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Sinonasal Tumors (ICSNT) aims to summarize the best available evidence and presents 48 thematic and histopathology-based topics spanning the field., Methods: In accordance with prior International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology documents, ICSNT assigned each topic as an Evidence-Based Review with Recommendations, Evidence-Based Review, and Literature Review based on the level of evidence. An international group of multidisciplinary author teams were assembled for the topic reviews using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses format, and completed sections underwent a thorough and iterative consensus-building process. The final document underwent rigorous synthesis and review prior to publication., Results: The ICSNT document consists of four major sections: general principles, benign neoplasms and lesions, malignant neoplasms, and quality of life and surveillance. It covers 48 conceptual and/or histopathology-based topics relevant to sinonasal neoplasms and masses. Topics with a high level of evidence provided specific recommendations, while other areas summarized the current state of evidence. A final section highlights research opportunities and future directions, contributing to advancing knowledge and community intervention., Conclusion: As an embodiment of the multidisciplinary and collaborative model of care in sinonasal neoplasms and masses, ICSNT was designed as a comprehensive, international, and multidisciplinary collaborative endeavor. Its primary objective is to summarize the existing evidence in the field of sinonasal neoplasms and masses., (© 2023 The Authors. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy and American Rhinologic Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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35. Inflammatory characteristics of central compartment atopic disease.
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Rubel KE, Lubner RJ, Lopez AA, Li P, Huang LC, Sheng Q, Wu J, Wise SK, DelGaudio JM, Chandra RK, Chowdhury N, and Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Prospective Studies, Chronic Disease, Cytokines, Rhinitis epidemiology, Sinusitis epidemiology, Sinusitis surgery, Sinusitis microbiology, Nasal Polyps surgery, Asthma, Aspirin-Induced epidemiology, Allergic Fungal Sinusitis
- Abstract
Background: Central compartment atopic disease (CCAD) is an emerging phenotype of chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis (CRSwNP) characterized by prominent central nasal inflammatory changes. This study compares the inflammatory characteristics of CCAD relative to other phenotypes of CRSwNP., Methods: A cross-sectional analysis of data from a prospective clinical study was performed on patients with CRSwNP who were undergoing endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS). Patients with CCAD, aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD), allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFRS), and non-typed CRSwNP (CRSwNP NOS) were included and mucus cytokine levels and demographic data were analyzed for each group. Chi-squared/Mann-Whitney U tests and partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) were performed for comparison and classification., Results: A total of 253 patients were analyzed (CRSwNP, n = 137; AFRS, n = 50; AERD, n = 42; CCAD, n = 24). Patients with CCAD were the least likely to have comorbid asthma (p = 0.0004). The incidence of allergic rhinitis in CCAD patients did not vary significantly compared to patients with AFRS and AERD, but was higher compared to patients with CRSwNP NOS (p = 0.04). On univariate analysis, CCAD was characterized by less inflammatory burden, with reduced levels of interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-8, interferon gamma (IFN-γ), and eotaxin relative to other groups and significantly lower type 2 cytokines (IL-5, IL-13) relative to both AERD and AFRS. These findings were supported by multivariate PLS-DA, which clustered CCAD patients into a relatively homogenous low-inflammatory cytokine profile., Conclusions: CCAD has unique endotypic features compared to other patients with CRSwNP. The lower inflammatory burden may be reflective of a less severe variant of CRSwNP., (© 2023 ARS-AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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36. Triangle of Trust in Cancer Care? The Physician, the Patient, and Artificial Intelligence Chatbot.
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Artificial Intelligence, Trust, Physicians, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Trust, as a philosophic paradigm, is predominantly interpersonal, between human beings, and is differentiated from reliance. Can a person trust an inhumane amoral agent, such as a large language model artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, to manifest the goodwill and willingness normally required in order for it to be deemed trustworthy? This article explores the relationship between the cancer patient, their physician, and AI chatbot in a proposed tripartite, consultative, personalized approach to shared-care in precision molecular oncology. It examines the nature of trust between human agents and machines. It also contemplates AI-enhanced technical precision in state-of-the-art cancer management, complemented by trustworthy, holistic clinical care by a physician, for each individual patient. " To what extent can the user " trust " GPT-4? " Peter Lee,
1 Microsoft Research 2023.- Published
- 2023
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37. Cancer Care by Committee to be Superseded by Personal Physician-Patient Partnership Informed by Artificial Intelligence.
- Author
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Treatment Outcome, Artificial Intelligence, Prostatic Neoplasms, Physicians, Prostatic Neoplasms, Castration-Resistant pathology
- Abstract
Multidisciplinary tumor boards (MTBs) have become the reference standard of cancer management, founded upon randomized controlled trial (RCT) evidence-based guidelines. The inordinate delays inherent in awaiting formal regulatory agency approvals of novel therapeutic agents, and the rigidities and nongeneralizability of this regimented approach, often deny cancer patients timely access to effective innovative treatment. Reluctance of MTBs to accept theranostic care of patients with advanced neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) and metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer resulted in decades of delay in the incorporation of
177 Lu-octreotate and177 Lu-prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) into routine clinical oncology practice. Recent developments in immunotherapy and molecular targeted precision therapy, based on N-of-One individual multifactorial genome analyses, have greatly increased the complexity of decision-making. Burgeoning specialist workload and tight time frames now threaten to overwhelm the logistically, and emotionally, demanding MTB system. It is hypothesized that the advent of advanced artificial intelligence technology and Chatbot natural language algorithms will shift the cancer care paradigm from a MTB management model toward a personal physician-patient shared-care partnership for real-world practice of precision individualized holistic oncology.- Published
- 2023
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38. Epithelial innate immune response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa-derived flagellin in chronic rhinosinusitis.
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Li P, Sheng Q, Huang LC, and Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha, Lipopolysaccharides, Immunity, Innate, Cytokines metabolism, Chronic Disease, Epithelial Cells, Flagellin genetics, Flagellin metabolism, Sinusitis
- Abstract
Background: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common colonizing pathogen in the upper respiratory tract and is associated with recalcitrant chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). Herein we sought to characterize the effect of P. aeruginosa-derived flagellin on human sinonasal epithelial cell (HSNEC) immune responses and determine whether these pathways are disrupted in CRS., Methods: Air-liquid interface cultures were established from CRS and healthy control donors. Cells were incubated with P. aeruginosa-derived flagellin for 24 hours and transcriptional changes were assessed using whole transcriptome RNA sequencing. Apical and basolateral secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokines in interleukin (IL)-1β, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, and IL-6 were measured after stimulation by lipopolysaccharide or flagellin and responses were compared between CRS and healthy control patients., Results: HSNECs were weakly responsive to lipopolysaccharide, whereas flagellin stimulated a profound innate immune response dominated by TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-17 signaling and activation of the IL-17C/IL-23 axis. CRS-derived HNSECs showed an altered innate immune response to flagellin, characterized by a profound increase in TNF-α secretion coupled with reduced IL-6 secretion., Conclusions: Flagellin activates a potent innate immune response in HSNECs characterized by pro-inflammatory mediators and cytokines/chemokines associated with neutrophilic inflammation. HSNECs from CRS patients have a dysregulated innate immune response to flagellin characterized by an imbalance between IL-6 and TNF-α secretion., (© 2023 ARS-AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. Diagnosis, Prognosticators, and Management of Acute Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis: Multidisciplinary Consensus Statement and Evidence-Based Review with Recommendations.
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Roland LT, Humphreys IM, Le CH, Babik JM, Bailey CE, Ediriwickrema LS, Fung M, Lieberman JA, Magliocca KR, Nam HH, Teo NW, Thomas PC, Winegar BA, Birkenbeuel JL, David AP, Goshtasbi K, Johnson PG, Martin EC, Nguyen TV, Patel NN, Qureshi HA, Tay K, Vasudev M, Abuzeid WM, Hwang PH, Jafari A, Russell MS, Turner JH, Wise SK, and Kuan EC
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Acute Disease, Prognosis, Invasive Fungal Infections diagnosis, Sinusitis diagnosis, Sinusitis therapy, Sinusitis microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Acute invasive fungal sinusitis (AIFS) is an aggressive disease that requires prompt diagnosis and multidisciplinary treatment given its rapid progression. However, there is currently no consensus on diagnosis, prognosis, and management strategies for AIFS, with multiple modalities routinely employed. The purpose of this multi-institutional and multidisciplinary evidence-based review with recommendations (EBRR) is to thoroughly review the literature on AIFS, summarize the existing evidence, and provide recommendations on the management of AIFS., Methods: The PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases were systematically reviewed from inception through January 2022. Studies evaluating management for orbital, non-sinonasal head and neck, and intracranial manifestations of AIFS were included. An iterative review process was utilized in accordance with EBRR guidelines. Levels of evidence and recommendations on management principles for AIFS were generated., Results: A review and evaluation of published literature was performed on 12 topics surrounding AIFS (signs and symptoms, laboratory and microbiology diagnostics, endoscopy, imaging, pathology, surgery, medical therapy, management of extrasinus extension, reversing immunosuppression, and outcomes and survival). The aggregate quality of evidence was varied across reviewed domains., Conclusion: Based on the currently available evidence, judicious utilization of a combination of history and physical examination, laboratory and histopathologic techniques, and endoscopy provide the cornerstone for accurate diagnosis of AIFS. In addition, AIFS is optimally managed by a multidisciplinary team via a combination of surgery (including resection whenever possible), antifungal therapy, and correcting sources of immunosuppression. Higher quality (i.e., prospective) studies are needed to better define the roles of each modality and determine diagnosis and treatment algorithms., (© 2023 ARS-AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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40. Solace for the Cankered Soul.
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Physician-Patient Relations, Artificial Intelligence, Spirituality, Palliative Care psychology, Neoplasms therapy, Neoplasms psychology
- Abstract
The scourge of cancer mortally wounds the soul. From the time of diagnosis, the spiritual shock should be recognized, acknowledged, and addressed in concert with the personalized management strategy for the tumor. Optimal cancer care treats both body and soul. Psycho-oncology theory defines existential issues and spirituality in conceptually ambiguous terms but, in reality, such afflictions of the spirit cause great suffering in cancer patients. Patients often seek reassurance that their life has purpose and meaning, and the provision of emotional and soulful support from their oncologist is of inestimable importance to spiritual well-being. In addition to the time and resource constraints of daily clinical practice, recent challenges to the personal doctor-patient relationship include e-medicine and virtual clinical encounters, and the potential disruption to be wrought by new generation artificial intelligence. These obstacles are addressed with a view to the physician being able to continue to provide empathic compassionate care. The art of Kintsugi is invoked to offer a metaphor for restoration of the soul afflicted by cancer.
- Published
- 2023
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41. Endoscopic Repair of Internal Carotid Artery Injury with a Lateral Tongue Muscle Patch Graft: Novel Technique and Literature Review.
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Chapurin N, Sharma RK, Stevens MN, Kim E, Turner JH, and Russell PT
- Abstract
Objectives Iatrogenic injury to the internal carotid artery (ICA) is one of the most catastrophic complications of endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery. Previous research has shown that packing with a crushed muscle graft at the injury site can be an effective management technique to control bleeding and prevent the need for ICA sacrifice. Here, we describe a novel and readily available repair donor site-an autologous lateral tongue muscle patch. Design Three representative cases of a successful repair of ICA injuries using a lateral tongue muscle patch are included in this study. The graft measured approximately 2 × 3 cm and was taken from the lateral intrinsic tongue musculature. We describe the harvest of the graft, its advantages, and the details of operative repair. Results The lateral tongue provides a large and readily accessible source of muscle within the surgical field that can be quickly harvested during an endoscopic procedure. For the first case, an expanding parasellar ICA pseudoaneurysm was managed with a tongue muscle patch and nasal packing. In the second case, a cavernous ICA injury was sustained during craniopharyngioma resection. Case three involved an ICA injury during endonasal debridement of invasive fungal rhinosinusitis. None of the patients required embolization or neurovascular stenting. Postoperative angiograms and serial computed tomography angiograms showed complete resolution of the pseudoaneurysm, and the patients continued to do well at least 1 year after repair. Conclusion Lateral tongue muscle graft is an effective and efficient method to manage ICA injuries during endoscopic endonasal surgery. Advantages include the speed of harvest, donor site being readily accessible in the surgical field, and low donor site morbidity. It should be added to the repertoire of possible donor sites for addressing catastrophic sinonasal bleeding., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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42. Mucosal Gene Expression in Response to SARS-CoV-2 Is Associated with Viral Load.
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Rajagopala SV, Strickland BA, Pakala SB, Kimura KS, Shilts MH, Rosas-Salazar C, Brown HM, Freeman MH, Wessinger BC, Gupta V, Phillips E, Mallal SA, Turner JH, and Das SR
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Chemokines physiology, Immunity, Mucosal immunology, Interferons physiology, COVID-19 immunology, COVID-19 virology, Gene Expression immunology, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, Viral Load, Respiratory Mucosa immunology, Respiratory Mucosa virology
- Abstract
Little is known about the relationships between symptomatic early severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) viral load and upper airway mucosal gene expression and immune response. To examine the association of symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 early viral load with upper airway mucosal gene expression, we profiled the host mucosal transcriptome from nasopharyngeal swab samples from 68 adults with symptomatic, mild-to-moderate coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19). We measured SARS-CoV-2 viral load using reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR). We then examined the association of SARS-CoV-2 viral load with upper airway mucosal immune response. We detected SARS-CoV-2 in all samples and recovered >80% of the genome from 95% of the samples from symptomatic COVID-19 adults. The respiratory virome was dominated by SARS-CoV-2, with limited codetection of other respiratory viruses, with the human Rhinovirus C being identified in 4 (6%) samples. This limited codetection of other respiratory viral pathogens may be due to the implementation of public health measures, like social distancing and masking practices. We observed a significant positive correlation between SARS-CoV-2 viral load and interferon signaling (OAS2, OAS3, IFIT1, UPS18, ISG15, ISG20, IFITM1, and OASL), chemokine signaling (CXCL10 and CXCL11), and adaptive immune system (IFITM1, CD300E, and SIGLEC1) genes in symptomatic, mild-to-moderate COVID-19 adults, when adjusting for age, sex, and race. Interestingly, the expression levels of most of these genes plateaued at a cycle threshold ( C
T ) value of ~25. Overall, our data show that the early nasal mucosal immune response to SARS-CoV-2 infection is viral load dependent, potentially modifying COVID-19 outcomes. IMPORTANCE Several prior studies have shown that SARS-CoV-2 viral load can predict the likelihood of disease spread and severity. A higher detectable SARS-CoV-2 plasma viral load was associated with worse respiratory disease severity. However, the relationship between SARS-CoV-2 viral load, airway mucosal gene expression, and immune response remains elusive. We profiled the nasal mucosal transcriptome from nasal samples collected from adults infected with SARS-CoV-2 during spring 2020 with mild-to-moderate symptoms using a comprehensive metatranscriptomics method. We observed a positive correlation between SARS-CoV-2 viral load, interferon signaling, chemokine signaling, and adaptive immune system in adults with COVID-19. Our data suggest that early nasal mucosal immune response to SARS-CoV-2 infection was viral load dependent and may modify COVID-19 outcomes.- Published
- 2023
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43. Philosophy of Cancer Theranostics.
- Author
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Turner JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Precision Medicine, Philosophy, Quality of Life, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Imagine a theranostic nuclear physician oncologist engaged in a Socratic philosophic dialogue. Questions that may be posed include the status of our current knowledge base of radiomolecular tumor biology, the meaning of precision in personalized dosimetry, the nature of responsibility for direct patient care, and the moral and ethical dimensions of individual quality of life (QOL) when survival is prolonged. This review invites reflective enquiry into one's personal practice of theranostics in cancer care, with the objective of optimizing clinical outcomes, not only in terms of prolonged survival but also individual QOL, in respect of its meaning for each patient, both physically and emotionally.
- Published
- 2023
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44. Upper respiratory tract microbiota dynamics following COVID-19 in adults.
- Author
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Rosas-Salazar C, Kimura KS, Shilts MH, Strickland BA, Freeman MH, Wessinger BC, Gupta V, Brown HM, Boone HH, Rajagopala SV, Turner JH, and Das SR
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Middle Aged, SARS-CoV-2, Respiratory System, COVID-19, Microbiota
- Abstract
To date, little is known about the effect of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the virus responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, on the upper respiratory tract (URT) microbiota over time. To fill this knowledge gap, we used 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing to characterize the URT microbiota in 48 adults, including (1) 24 participants with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 who had serial mid-turbinate swabs collected up to 21 days after enrolment and (2) 24 asymptomatic, uninfected controls who had mid-turbinate swabs collected at enrolment only. To compare the URT microbiota between groups in a comprehensive manner, different types of statistical analyses that are frequently employed in microbial ecology were used, including ⍺-diversity, β-diversity and differential abundance analyses. Final statistical models included age, sex and the presence of at least one comorbidity as covariates. The median age of all participants was 34.00 (interquartile range=28.75-46.50) years. In comparison to samples from controls, those from participants with COVID-19 had a lower observed species index at day 21 (linear regression coefficient=-13.30; 95 % CI=-21.72 to -4.88; q =0.02). In addition, the Jaccard index was significantly different between samples from participants with COVID-19 and those from controls at all study time points (PERMANOVA q <0.05 for all comparisons). The abundance of three amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) (one Corynebacterium ASV, Frederiksenia canicola , and one Lactobacillus ASV) were decreased in samples from participants with COVID-19 at all seven study time points, whereas the abundance of one ASV (from the family Neisseriaceae ) was increased in samples from participants with COVID-19 at five (71.43 %) of the seven study time points. Our results suggest that mild-to-moderate COVID-19 can lead to alterations of the URT microbiota that persist for several weeks after the initial infection.
- Published
- 2023
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45. Association of cytokine profile with prior treatment failure and revision surgery in chronic rhinosinusitis.
- Author
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Longino ES, Labby AB, Wu J, Chapurin N, Li P, Chandra RK, Turner JH, and Chowdhury NI
- Subjects
- Humans, Chronic Disease, Interleukin-12, Interleukin-13, Interleukin-5, Interleukin-6, Nasal Polyps immunology, Nasal Polyps surgery, Cytokines immunology, Reoperation, Rhinitis immunology, Rhinitis surgery, Sinusitis immunology, Sinusitis surgery
- Abstract
Background: Inflammatory patterns in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) may predict disease severity, need for multiple sinus surgeries, and treatment response. This study analyzes nasal mucus inflammatory cytokine patterns in patients with (CRSwNP) and without (CRSsNP) nasal polyposis and their association with revision sinus surgery., Methods: A total of 319 CRS patients who underwent sinus surgery were included. Cytokines were quantified in intraoperative mucus specimens using a multiplex flow cytometric bead assay. Cytokine expression patterns in patients with 0, 1, and ≥2 previous surgeries were analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis and principal component (PC) regression analyses., Results: There were 122 (38%) patients with CRSsNP and 197 (62%) with CRSwNP. On univariate analysis, interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, IL-8, and IL-21 were associated with increasing number of sinus surgeries in CRSsNP, as were IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-9, IL-17A, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α in CRSwNP. PC analysis with continuous Poisson regression in CRSwNP demonstrated that high IL-5 and IL-13 and low IL-1β, IL-12, and IL-21 were associated with more prior surgeries. In CRSsNP low IL-13 and high IL-5 and regulated-on-activation, normal T-cell-expressed and secreted (RANTES) were associated with more prior surgeries. Age remained a significant covariate in the full regression model for CRSsNP, but was nonsignificant in CRSwNP., Conclusion: In CRSwNP, elevated IL-5 and IL-13 levels were higher at time of surgery in patients with more prior surgeries. Type 2 cytokines in CRSsNP demonstrated mixed associations with revision surgery. For both phenotypes, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-21 were consistently lower as number of prior surgeries increased, suggesting that treatment-resistant disease may be modulated by impairment in these signaling pathways., (© 2022 ARS-AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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46. Pharmacokinetic-based failure of a detergent virucidal for severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) nasal infections: A preclinical study and randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Esther CR Jr, Kimura KS, Mikami Y, Edwards CE, Das SR, Freeman MH, Strickland BA, Brown HM, Wessinger BC, Gupta VC, Von Wahlde K, Sheng Q, Huang LC, Bacon DR, Kimple AJ, Ceppe AS, Kato T, Pickles RJ, Randell SH, Baric RS, Turner JH, and Boucher RC
- Subjects
- Antiviral Agents, Detergents, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Viral Load, COVID-19, Common Cold
- Abstract
Background: The nose is the portal for severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, suggesting the nose as a target for topical antiviral therapies. The purpose of this study was to assess both the in vivo and in vitro efficacy of a detergent-based virucidal agent, Johnson and Johnson's Baby Shampoo (J&J), in SARS-CoV-2-infected subjects., Methods: Subjects were randomized into three treatment groups: (1) twice daily nasal irrigation with J&J in hypertonic saline, (2) hypertonic saline alone, and (3) no intervention. Complementary in vitro experiments were performed in cultured human nasal epithelia. The primary outcome measure in the clinical trial was change in SARS-CoV-2 viral load over 21 days. Secondary outcomes included symptom scores and change in daily temperature. Outcome measures for in vitro studies included change in viral titers., Results: Seventy-two subjects completed the clinical study (n = 24 per group). Despite demonstrated safety and robust efficacy in in vitro virucidal assays, J&J irrigations had no impact on viral titers or symptom scores in treated subjects relative to controls. Similar findings were observed administering J&J to infected cultured human airway epithelia using protocols mimicking the clinical trial regimen. Additional studies of cultured human nasal epithelia demonstrated that lack of efficacy reflected pharmacokinetic failure, with the most virucidal J&J detergent components rapidly absorbed from nasal surfaces., Conclusion: In this randomized clinical trial of subjects with SARS-CoV-2 infection, a topical detergent-based virucidal agent had no effect on viral load or symptom scores. Complementary in vitro studies confirmed a lack of efficacy, reflective of pharmacokinetic failure and rapid absorption from nasal surfaces., (© 2022 ARS-AAOA, LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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47. Mucosal gene expression in response to SARS-CoV-2 is associated with early viral load.
- Author
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Rajagopala SV, Strickland BA, Pakala SB, Kimura KS, Shilts MH, Rosas-Salazar C, Brown HM, Freeman MH, Wessinger BC, Gupta V, Phillips E, Mallal SA, Turner JH, and Das SR
- Abstract
Little is known about the relationships between symptomatic early-time SARS-CoV-2 viral load and upper airway mucosal gene expression and immune response. To examine the association of symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 early viral load with upper airway mucosal gene expression, we profiled the host mucosal transcriptome from nasopharyngeal swab samples from 68 adults with symptomatic, mild-to-moderate COVID-19. We measured SARS-CoV-2 viral load using qRT-PCR. We then examined the association of SARS-CoV-2 viral load with upper airway mucosal immune response. We detected SARS-CoV-2 in all samples and recovered >80% of the genome from 85% of the samples from symptomatic COVID-19 adults. The respiratory virome was dominated by SARS-CoV-2, with limited co-detection of common respiratory viruses i.e., only the human Rhinovirus (HRV) being identified in 6% of the samples. We observed a significant positive correlation between SARS-CoV-2 viral load and interferon signaling (OAS2, OAS3, IFIT1, UPS18, ISG15, ISG20, IFITM1, and OASL), chemokine signaling (CXCL10 and CXCL11), and adaptive immune system (IFITM1, CD300E, and SIGLEC1) genes in symptomatic, mild-to-moderate COVID-19 adults, when adjusted for age, sex and race. Interestingly, the expression levels of most of these genes plateaued at a CT value of ~25. Overall, our data shows that early nasal mucosal immune response to SARS-CoV-2 infection is viral load dependent, which potentially could modify COVID-19 outcomes., Author Summary: Several prior studies have shown that SARS-CoV-2 viral load can predict the likelihood of disease spread and severity. A higher detectable SARS-CoV-2 plasma viral load was associated with worse respiratory disease severity. However, the relationship between SARS-CoV-2 viral load and airway mucosal gene expression and immune response remains elusive. We profiled the nasal mucosal transcriptome from nasal samples collected from adults infected with SARS-CoV-2 during Spring 2020 with mild-to-moderate symptoms using a comprehensive metatranscriptomics method. We observed a positive correlation between SARS-CoV-2 viral load with interferon signaling, chemokine signaling, and adaptive immune system in adults with COVID-19. Our data suggest that early nasal mucosal immune response to SARS-CoV-2 infection was viral load-dependent and may modify COVID-19 outcomes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Population differences between COVID-19 and other postviral olfactory dysfunction: Results from a large case-control study.
- Author
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Chapurin N, Dennis S, Chowdhury NI, Trone T, Chaballout B, Longino E, Turner JH, and Chandra RK
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Humans, Smell, COVID-19 epidemiology, Olfaction Disorders epidemiology
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Current insight into treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis: Phenotypes, endotypes, and implications for targeted therapeutics.
- Author
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Chapurin N, Wu J, Labby AB, Chandra RK, Chowdhury NI, and Turner JH
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Chronic Disease, Humans, Phenotype, Nasal Polyps, Rhinitis drug therapy, Sinusitis drug therapy
- Abstract
Chronic rhinosinusitis is characterized by persistent locoregional mucosal inflammation of the paranasal sinuses and upper airway that has substantial associated health care costs. Personalized approaches to care that incorporate use of molecular biomarkers, phenotypes, and inflammatory endotypes is a major focus of research at this time, and the concurrent rise of targeted therapeutics and biologic therapies has the potential to rapidly advance care and improve outcomes. Recent findings suggest that improved understanding of chronic rhinosinusitis phenotypic and endotypic heterogeneity, and incorporation of these characteristics into clinical care pathways, may facilitate more effective selection of surgical and/or therapeutic interventions. Ultimately, these personalized approaches have the potential to target specific inflammatory pathways, increase efficacy, reduce costs, and limit side effects. This review summarizes recent advances in the identification and characterization of chronic rhinosinusitis phenotypes, endotypes, and biomarkers and reviews potential implications for targeted therapeutics., (Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Long-term survival and toxicity in patients with neuroendocrine tumors treated with 177 Lu-octreotate peptide radionuclide therapy.
- Author
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Kennedy KR, Turner JH, MacDonald WBG, Claringbold PG, Boardman G, and Ransom DT
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Octreotide adverse effects, Radioisotopes adverse effects, Leukemia drug therapy, Neuroendocrine Tumors drug therapy, Neuroendocrine Tumors radiotherapy, Organometallic Compounds adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) has shown favorable results in neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). Long-term safety and efficacy data for
177 Lu-octreotate PRRT, particularly in combination with chemotherapy, is lacking., Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective review of the long-term toxicity and survival outcomes of 104 patients with advanced NETs treated on 4 phase 2 clinical trials with Lutetium-177-octreotate (177 Lu-octreotate) PRRT, mostly in combination with chemotherapy. Median follow-up was 68 months, which represents the longest follow-up study of177 Lu-octreotate PRRT for NETs to date., Results: Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 37 months, and median overall survival (OS) was 71 months. Five- and 10-year OS were 62% and 29%, and 5- and 10-year PFS were 36% and 21%, respectively, demonstrating177 Lu-octreotate can provide durable responses. PRRT was well tolerated with 1.9% of patients developing chronic renal impairment and 1% of patients developing long-term thrombocytopenia. Interestingly, there was a relatively high rate of myelodysplasia (MDS)/leukemia (6.7%), possibly attributable to the longer follow-up (with all except 1 case occurring more than 4 years after PRRT treatment) or to the addition of concurrent chemotherapy., Conclusions: Lutetium-177-Octreotate PRRT remains an efficacious and well tolerated treatment in long-term follow-up. For clinicians deciding on the timing of PRRT for individual patients, the 6.7% long-term risk of MDS/leukemia needs to be balanced against the 21% PFS at 10 years., (© 2022 American Cancer Society.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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