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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Growth gone awry: exploring the role of embryonic liver development genes in HCV induced cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma

Behnke, Martha K. 19 November 2012 (has links)
Introduction and methods: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains a difficult disease to study even after a decade of genomic analysis. Metabolic and cell-cycle perturbations are known, large changes in tumors that add little to our understanding of the development of tumors, but generate “noise” that obscures potentially important smaller scale expression changes in “driver genes”. Recently, some researchers have suggested that HCC shares pathways involving the master regulators of embryonic development. Here, we investigated the involvement and specificity of developmental genes in HCV-cirrhosis and HCV-HCC. We obtained microarray studies from 30 patients with HCV-cirrhosis and 49 patients with HCV-HCC and compared to 12 normal livers. Differential gene expression is specific to liver development genes: 86 of 202 (43%) genes specific to liver development had differential expression between normal and cirrhotic or HCC samples. Of 60 genes with paralogous function, which are specific to development of other organs and have known associations with other cancer types, none were expressed in either adult normal liver or tumor tissue. Developmental genes are widely differentially expressed in both cirrhosis and early HCC, but not late HCC: 69 liver development genes were differentially expressed in cirrhosis, and 58 of these (84%) were also dysregulated in early HCC. 19/58 (33%) had larger-magnitude changes in cirrhosis and 5 (9%) had larger-magnitude changes in early HCC. 16 (9%) genes were uniquely altered in early tumors, while only 2 genes were uniquely changed in late-stage (T3 and T4) HCC. Together, these results suggest that the involvement of the master regulators of liver development are active in the pre-cancerous cirrhotic liver and in cirrhotic livers with emerging tumors but play a limited role in the transition from early to late stage HCC. Common patterns of coordinated developmental gene expression include: (1) Dysregulation of BMP2 signaling in cirrhosis followed by overexpression of BMP inhibitors in HCC. BMP inhibitor GPC3 was overexpressed in nearly all tumors, while GREM1 was associated specifically with recurrence-free survival after ablation and transplant. (2) Cirrhosis tissues acquire a progenitor-like signature including high expression of Vimentin, EPCAM, and KRT19, and these markers remain over-expressed to a lesser extent in HCC. (3) Hepatocyte proliferation inhibitors (HPI) E-cadherin (CDH1), BMP2, and MST1 were highly expressed in cirrhosis and remained over-expressed in 16 HCC patients who were transplanted with excellent recurrence-free survival (94% survival after 2 years; mean recurrence-free survival = 5.6 yrs), while loss in early HCC was associated with early recurrence and (2 year). Loss of HPI overexpression was also correlated with overexpression of c-MET and loss of STAT3, LAMA2, FGFR2, CITED2, KIT, SMAD7, GATA6, ERBB2, and NOTCH2.
2

Autoimmune hepatitis in Sweden

Werner, Mårten January 2009 (has links)
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) was identified as an entity by the Swedish professor Jan Waldenström in the 1950s. It was then denoted lupoid hepatitis, characterized by liver inflammation and most often affecting young women. During the years the diagnosis has become more defined (as the non A non B hepatitis has been identified as Hepatitis C) and now can be safely separated from other diseases with liver inflammation. Studies of epidemiological data and long term prognosis have been scarce in the literature. Within a collaboration between the university hospitals in Sweden, we collected what we believe is the largest cohort in the world of patients with AIH. Data from the medical records of 473 individuals was, after AIH-score calculations where the diagnosis was confirmed, collected in a data base, in which most of the analysis was done. Data from the Swedish national registers of cancer, death cause, and birth register was searched for these patients as well as controls. The aim of the thesis was to explore epidemiological and clinical outcome of AIH.The onset of AIH may be at any age, but the incidence seems to increase after 50 years of age; 75% are females, the overall incidence (0.85/ 100,000 inhabitants and year) and prevalence (11/100,000 inhabitants) are figures that are within the range of another but smaller Scandinavian study. Approximately 30 % had cirrhosis already at diagnosis and 87% displayed at some time positive auto-antibodies indicating AIH (Smooth muscle ab and or antinuclear ab).  Indications of future risk for liver transplantation or death is an advanced AIH at diagnosis with liver cirrhosis, decompensated liver disease, elevated PK INR as well as age. Acute hepatitis-like onset seems to carry a lower risk for later liver transplantation or death. Current Swedish national therapy traditions with immune suppression seem to be well tolerated. Five and ten years overall life expectancy does not differ from controls. Thirty-five women gave birth to 63 children, for 3 after liver transplantation of the mother. Thirteen of the women had liver cirrhosis. Current pharmacological treatment seems to be safe both for the patient and the foetus. Thirty percent of the patients experienced flair after delivery. It has been supposed that there is an overrisk for hepatocellular cancer (HCC) associated with AIH. Our figures are the first in the world to be presented that confirms a twenty-three fold overrisk (95% Confidence Interval 7.5-54.3) for hepatobiliar cancer. We found as well an overrisk of non-Hodgkin lymphomas of 13.09 (95% CI 4.2-30.6).Conclusion:  Our epidemiological results confirm that AIH is a fairly uncommon disease, and that many already at time of diagnosis have an advanced disease with liver cirrhosis. There is a clear overrisk for HCC and lymphoma. For those women with AIH who become pregnant the prognosis for the child as well as for the mother is good, even for those women who already have compensated cirrhosis. There is a risk for relapse after delivery. The overall survival for AIH patients with current therapy is good.
3

Traitement du carcinome hépatocellulaire sur foie sain et pathologique par hépatectomie partielle : résultats d'une enquête nationale sur 2591 malades opérés en France entre 1990 et 2005

Celebic, Aleksandar 08 December 2009 (has links)
Le carcinome hépatocellulaire (CHC) est un cancer très fréquent - au 5ème rang de l’échelon mondial - dont l’incidence ne cesse d’augmenter. Lié aux maladies chroniques du foie (hépatite C, syndrome métabolique et, le plus souvent, cirrhose), il représente désormais un véritable problème de santé publique. C’est la nature du foie sous-jacent qui détermine les modalités de sa prise en charge. Lorsque le foie ne présente pas de maladie chronique (foie sain), on se trouve généralement devant une tumeur déjà évoluée; dans ce cas on a recours essentiellement à la résection hépatique. Lorsque le foie présente une maladie chronique (foie pathologique), qu’il s’agisse de fibrose, cirrhose ou hépatite, c’est le stade tumoral au moment du diagnostic qui oriente le choix du traitement ; à part la transplantation, limitée dans ses indications, les options thérapeutiques comportent la résection hépatique, la destruction par voie sous-cutanée (radio fréquence) et un traitement par voie artérielle (chimioembolisation). Cependant, ces traitements à visée curative, ne peuvent être envisagés actuellement que dans 30% des cas. Notre travail porte uniquement sur la résection hépatique. Partout disponible, cette intervention chirurgicale représente en effet le traitement de référence dans la prise en charge du CHC. Nous nous appuyons sur une vaste enquête nationale qui, développée sur une période de 15 ans – de 1990 à 2005 – à partir de 23 centres de chirurgie, à porté sur plus de 2590 dossiers de patients. Grâce à ces données de base, particulièrement précieuses par leur nombre et leur précisions, nous avons tenté de donner une image panoramique des pratiques (indications, techniques opératoires) et des résultats (survie, récidive, morbidité, mortalité) de la résection hépatique pour CHC en France. Il s’agit de la plus grande étude multicentrique chirurgicale menée sur le CHC en France à ce jour. On a classé 102 paramètres dans 6 groupes de données ont été colligés pour chaque malade inclus dans l’étude: Terrain, Bilan préopératoire, Chirurgie, Anatomopathologie, Morbidité et traitements adjuvants et Evolution. Au total, cette enquête a permis de recueillir une somme considérable de données dont l’analyse multivariée avait pour l’objectif d’aboutir à des critères prédictifs de mortalité opératoire et de survie après résection sur foie sain et pathologique. Cette analyse a confirmé le développent et la qualité de la chirurgie hépatique en France. Aussi, l’analyse a montré que la résection hépatique est un traitement efficace du CHC sur foie sain et pathologique. Ces résultats et leur implication pour l’approche multidisciplinaire en cancérologie contribueront à améliorer les connaissances et la prise en charge du CHC. Finalement, à coté de la transplantation hépatique, limitée par ses indications restreintes et la pénurie de greffons, la résection du CHC occupe une place importante qui doit continuer de croître du fait de ses bons résultats et de l’augmentation constante de l’incidence du CHC / Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common cancer worldwide, and the third most common cause of cancer-related death. It is a major health problem worldwide, which represents the most prevalent primary liver cancer and constitutes the third most frequent cause of cancer-related deaths. The major risk factor for HCC is cirrhosis. All types of cirrhosis predispose to HCC, but the incidence is particularly high in persistent infection with hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C (HCV) and in alcoholic liver disease. The clinical presentation and management of HCC depends on whether the liver is cirrhotic and whether there is underlying viral hepatitis. Therapeutic options fall into four main categories (1) surgical interventions, including tumor resection and liver transplantation, (2) percutaneous interventions, including ethanol injection and radiofrequency thermal ablation, (3) transarterial interventions, including embolisation and chemoembolisation and (4) drugs as well as gene and immune therapies. Potentially curative therapies are tumor resection, liver transplantation, and percutaneous interventions that can result in complete responses and improved survival in a high proportion of patients. Liver resection offers the greatest impact on survival when patients do not meet transplantation criteria and this is considered as the optimal treatment for HCC. The objective of this thesis, based on a retrospective survey, was to give an overview on conditions of realization and the results of the resection of HCC in France, in the period from 1990-2005. All the French centers of excellence in the hepatobiliary surgery were contacted and most of them accepted to participate. All the contacted units were essentially localized in University Clinical Centers, all of them experts in hepatic surgery and most of them were centers for liver transplantation. More than 2590 cases with hepatic resection were collected in this study. The file consisted of 102 questions and contained following headings: demographic data, underlined liver pathology, circumstances of diagnosis, imaging, evaluation of underlined liver pathology: biological, morphological, histological, preparation for resection: neoadjuvant treatment of the tumor, portal embolization, surgical intervention: approach, clamping, vascular control, nature and the extent of the exeresis, anatomic or non-anatomic features, histopathological analysis of the removed tissues, results: mortality, morbidity, recurrence, survival, lost from analysis. In total, this survey enabled us to collect a considerable sum of data in order to give a more precise overview on predictive criteria of per operative mortality and survival, as well as recurrence rates, after the resection of normal and pathological livers. It confirmed the development and the quality of the hepatic surgery in France
4

Zu Leberkrebs und Arbeitsplatzexposition bei Frauen

Heinemann, Klaas 22 May 2000 (has links)
Abstrakt Bei Frauen wurde der Zusammenhang zwischen berufsbedingten Expositionen und dem primären Leberzellkarzinom (HCC) bisher nur sehr eingeschränkt diskutiert, das heißt, es gibt bisher kaum Forschungsergebnisse. Diese Arbeit zeigt die Ergebnisse einer internationalen Fall-Kontroll-Studie bei Frauen. Es wurden 317 HCC-Fälle und 1789 Kontrollen ohne diese Erkrankung untersucht. Grenzwertig signifikant erhöhte, adjustierte Risikoschätzer (Odds Ratio=OR)konnten für Beschäftigte in der Landwirtschaft (OR=2.50, 95% Konfidenzintervall: 1.28-4.88) und der chemischen Industrie (2.37 (1.04-5.41)) gefunden werden. Andere, nicht-signifikant erhöhte Werte fanden sich bei Frauen, die in der pharmazeutischen Industrie, in der Plastik- und PVC-Produktion, in der Schlachterei und in der Textilindustrie beschäftigt waren. Allerdings zeigten die jeweiligen Risikoschätzer nur eine geringe Konsistenz zwischen drei verschiedenen Analyseverfahren. Desweiteren zeigte keine der Analysen einen linearen Trend mit zunehmender Zeitdauer der Exposition. Die Anzahl der exponierten Fälle und Kontrollen waren aber in vielen der Berufsgruppen sehr klein, und damit auch die Studien-Power und die Präzision. Wir konnten keinen ernstzunehmenden und konsistenten Beleg für eine Beziehung zwischen HCC bei Frauen und berufsbedingten Expositionen aufzeigen. Nichtsdestotrotz, auch schwache Hinweise auf berufsbedingte Risiken rechtfertigen weitere sorgfältige Betrachtungen in zukünftigen Studien. / Abstract The association of occupational variables and hepatocellular cancer (HCC) is discussed with particular reference to women, as little research has been undertaken on their behalf. This paper reports the results of an international case-control study concerning women and involves 317 cases of HCC and 1789 controls without HCC. Working in the chemical industry and in farming was shown to have only a marginally significant risk associated with HCC: adjusted occupational risk (OR) and 95% confidence interval 2.37 (1.04-5.41) for the chemical industry and 2.50 (1.28-4.88) for farming. Other non-significantly elevated ORs were observed in the pharmaceutical, plastics, PVC-producing, textile-producing and butchery industries. Little consistency was found among the risk estimates for HCC, based on three different analytical approaches. None of the analyses showed a linear trend of risk with increasing duration of exposure. However, the numbers of exposed cases and controls were small for many of the occupations and therefore the study power and precision were low. We failed to find important and consistent evidence for a relationship between HCC in women and occupational variables. However, even weak evidence of occupational risk warrants careful consideration in future studies.

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