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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.
301

Determinants of systemic inflammation in colorectal cancer

Sirniö, P. (Päivi) 29 October 2019 (has links)
Abstract Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. In some CRC patients, the presence of the tumor elicits a systemic inflammatory response and metabolic derangements that lead to progressive tissue wasting. Systemic inflammation has been associated with decreased survival independent of tumor stage. However, the mechanisms and downstream effects of systemic inflammation in CRC are uncertain. The aim of these studies was to examine the determinants of systemic inflammation in CRC. The study material consisted of tumor and serum samples collected from patients with stage I–IV CRC operated at the Oulu University Hospital (n=336). From preoperative serum samples, the levels of cell death marker keratin 18, matrix metalloproteinase 8 (MMP8), and ten metabolites (apolipoprotein A1 and nine amino acids) were measured. CRC patients with systemic inflammation, assessed using a modified Glasgow Prognostic Score, had elevated serum levels of MMP8 and phenylalanine. On the contrary, the concentrations of apolipoprotein A1, glutamine, and histidine were lower compared to patients without systemic inflammation. Increased serum keratin 18 level associated with systemic inflammation in patients with metastatic disease. Elevated keratin 18 and MMP8 levels and decreased apolipoprotein A1 level were independent predictors of worse survival. These studies describe biomarkers of systemic inflammation that provide insight into the mechanisms of systemic inflammation, have potential prognostic value in CRC, and are possible therapeutic targets. The results suggest that cell death and systemic inflammation are strongly connected in CRC, but the potential mechanistic link between them and tissues involved remain to be elucidated. / Tiivistelmä Paksusuolisyöpä on kolmanneksi yleisin syöpä ja toiseksi yleisin syöpäkuoleman aiheuttaja Suomessa. Osalla potilaista syöpään liittyy systeemisen tulehdusreaktion aktivoituminen ja aineenvaihduntahäiriö, joka johtaa yleiseen näivettymiseen. Systeemisen tulehduksen on havaittu olevan yhteydessä huonoon ennusteeseen riippumatta kasvaimen levinneisyydestä. Systeemisen tulehduksen aktivaatiomekanismit ja vaikutukset paksusuolisyövässä ovat kuitenkin huonosti tunnettuja. Tutkimuksen tarkoituksena oli selvittää systeemistä tulehdusta määrittäviä tekijöitä paksusuolisyövässä. Aineisto koostui Oulun yliopistollisessa sairaalassa leikattujen paksusuolisyöpäpotilaiden (syövän levinneisyysaste I–IV) kasvain- ja seeruminäytteistä (n=336). Seeruminäytteistä mitattiin solukuolemaa osoittavan keratiini 18:n pitoisuudet, matriksin metalloproteinaasi 8 (MMP8):n määrät sekä 10 metaboliitin (apolipoproteiini A1 ja 9 aminohappoa) tasot. Paksusuolisyöpäpotilailla, joilla systeemistä tulehdusta osoittava mGPS-indeksi oli korkea, seerumin MMP8- ja fenyylialaniinitasot olivat koholla. Sen sijaan apolipoproteiini A1:n, glutamiinin ja histidiinin pitoisuudet olivat matalammat verrattuna potilaisiin, joilla ei ollut systeemistä tulehdusta. Kohonnut keratiini 18 -pitoisuus oli yhteydessä systeemiseen tulehdukseen etäpesäkkeistä tautia sairastavilla potilailla. Kohonnut keratiini 18- ja MMP8-taso sekä matala apolipoproteiini A1-pitoisuus liittyivät potilaiden huonoon ennusteeseen. Tutkimuksessa löydettiin systeemisen tulehduksen merkkiaineita, jotka tuovat hyödyllistä tietoa systeemisen tulehduksen mekanismeista ja potilaiden ennusteesta paksusuolisyövässä, ja ovat mahdollisia terapeuttisia kohteita. Tulosten perusteella paksusuolisyövässä solukuolema liittyy vahvasti systeemiseen tulehdukseen, mutta lisätutkimuksia tarvitaan selvittämään näiden tapahtumien mahdolliset syy-seuraussuhteet sekä tapahtumaan liittyvät kudokset.
302

Analýza cirkulujících markerů u pacientů se solidními nádory / Analysis of circulating markers in patients with solid tumors

Buranovská, Katarína January 2019 (has links)
Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and its tumour-derived circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) fraction are considered an innovative prognostic and predictive biomarker in oncological diagnostics. Many studies have demonstrated higher levels of cfDNA concentration and integrity, as an indicator of the amount of ctDNA in cfDNA, in body fluids from patients with cancer diseases in comparison with healthy individuals, which suggest its potential as an effective biomarker for monitoring of the tumour dynamics. This study focused on optimisation and validation of measurement methods later used for analysis of cfDNA concentration and integrity in blood samples from patients with four different solid cancers. Two different commercial isolation kits have been tested in plasma and serum samples. Quantitative real-time polymerase reaction (qPCR) and PicoGreen dsDNA assay were optimized to effectively quantify low concentrations of cfDNA, subsequently compared to each other and to droplet digital PCR assay tested on selected samples. The concentration and integrity of cfDNA from plasma samples of breast, ovarian, colorectal and pancreatic cancer patients were evaluated. Higher amounts of cfDNA were obtained by the QIAamp Circulating Nucleic Acid isolation kit (Qiagen) in comparison to Plasma/Serum Cell-Free...
303

Evaluation of the Prognostic Criteria for Medicare Hospice Eligibility

Moore, D Helen 16 March 2004 (has links)
This work evaluates Medicare Hospice Benefit (MHB) eligibility standards that are referenced throughout this work as either "Medicare prognostic criteria," or "Local Medical Review Policies." Following the Chapter 1 overview of prognosis in end-stage disease, association between the Medicare clinical predictors and survival outcomes in dementing, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular illnesses are described in Chapter 2. Chapter 3 examines the prognostic belief systems of multidisciplinary hospice personnel. Chapter 4 seeks to improve the predictive performance of the Medicare prognostic criteria for dementia. The fifth and final chapter critiques the Medicare prognostic criteria from conceptual, methodological, and applied perspectives and suggests related research and policy directions. The Chapter 2 sample comprised 453 medical records of terminally ill persons; Chapter 4 sample, 187 medical records. Thirty-seven hospice personnel comprised the respondent sample in the Chapter 3 study. Chapter 2 assesses the scientific validity of federally sanctioned Medicare "severe illness/end-stage illness" demarcations in three non-cancer disease catregories. Calculation of measures of predictive validity revealed striking and consistent imbalances of false negative and false positive errors across the three diagnostic categories studied, suggesting inequitable distribution of the costs and benefits of regulatory reform among public health payers, consumers and providers. Chapter 3 qualitatively examines the belief systems of experienced hospice personnel regarding physical and non-physical time-to-death influences in end-stage disease. Non-physical survival influences were believed by these expert informants to have more survival impact in non-cancer as opposed to cancer end-stage diseases, and at remote as compared to imminent death proximities. Chapter 3 highlights the enormous complexity of time-to-death influences as well as the importance of non-physical influences on duration of survival in end-stage disease. Chapter 4 demonstrates that dropping one of the three prognostic criteria for dementia (the medical complications criteria) may improve predictive validity. This finding demonstrates that, in dementing illnesses at least, functional debility may better identify 6-month survival prognosis and thus hospice eligibility, than the composite Medicare prognostic criteria. The merit of parsimony in objective definitions of terminality is implied. Chapter 5 critiques the Medicare prognostic criteria, and suggests policy alternatives that are both prognostically- and non-prognostically-based. Peripheral findings of this work and suggestions for future end-of-life research conclude the dissertation.
304

Applications of artificial neural networks in epidemiology : prediction and classification

Black, James Francis Patrick, 1959- January 2002 (has links)
Abstract not available
305

24-hour Ambulatory Blood Pressure - Relation to the Insulin Resistance Syndrome and Cardiovascular Disease

Björklund, Kristina January 2002 (has links)
<p>This study examined relationships between 24-hour ambulatory BP and components of the insulin resistance syndrome, and investigated the prognostic significance of 24-hour BP for cardiovascular morbidity in a longitudinal population-based study of 70-year-old men. The findings indicated, that a reduced nocturnal BP fall, nondipping, was a marker of increased risk primarily in subjects with diabetes. A low body mass index and a more favourable serum fatty acid composition at age 50 predicted the development of white-coat as opposed to sustained hypertension over 20 years. Furthermore, cross-sectionally determined hypertensive organ damage at age 70 was detected in sustained hypertensive but not in white-coat hypertensive subjects. In a prospective analysis, 24-hour ambulatory pulse pressure and systolic BP variability at age 70 were strong predictors of subsequent cardiovascular morbidity, independently of office BP and other established risk factors. Isolated ambulatory hypertension, defined as having a normal office BP but increased daytime ambulatory BP, was associated with a significantly increased incidence of cardiovascular events during follow-up. </p><p>Hypertension constitutes part of the insulin resistance syndrome, and is a common and powerful risk factor for cardiovascular disease in elderly. Blood pressure (BP) measured with 24-hour ambulatory monitoring gives however more detailed information and may be a better estimate of the true BP than conventional office BP. </p><p>In summary, these data provide further knowledge of 24-hour ambulatory BP and associated metabolic risk profile, and suggest that the prognostic value of 24-hour ambulatory BP is superior to conventional BP in an elderly population.</p>
306

Headache in Schoolchildren : Epidemiology, Pain Comorbidity and Psychosocial Factors

Laurell, Katarina January 2005 (has links)
<p>Headache is the most frequently reported pain in children and is associated with missed schooldays, anxiety, depressive symptoms and various physical symptoms. A secular trend of increasing headache prevalence has been suggested. Few studies have focused on tension-type headache among children from the general population. </p><p>The aims of this thesis were to describe the prevalence, incidence and prognosis of tension-type headache, migraine and overall headache in schoolchildren, to identify medical, psychological and social factors associated with these headache types, and to determine whether the prevalence of headache has increased over the last decades.</p><p>In 1997, 1850 schoolchildren aged 7-15 years from the city of Uppsala participated in a questionnaire study and 1371 (74.1%) responded. Out of these, a randomly selected, stratified sample of 131 children and their parents were interviewed. Three years later, 122 children from the interview sample replied to an identical headache questionnaire.</p><p>Compared with a similar study in 1955, a significantly lower proportion of schoolchildren reported no headache. The prevalence of tension-type headache increased with age and was significantly higher in girls than boys after the age of twelve. Similar age and gender differences were obtained for migraine. A higher proportion of girls reported frequent headache than boys. Children with headache, especially those with migraine, as well as their first-degree relatives suffered from other pains and physical symptoms more frequently than headache-free children and their first-degree relatives. Although the likelihood of experiencing the same headache diagnosis and symptoms at follow-up was high, about one fifth of children with migraine developed tension-type headache and vice versa. Female gender was a predictor of migraine and frequent headache a predictor of overall headache at follow-up. The estimated annual incidence for tension-type headache, migraine and overall headache was 81, 65 and 131 per 1000 children, respectively. </p><p>In conclusion, the results indicate that headache has become increasingly common among schoolchildren over the last decades. Prevention and treatment of headache is particularly important for girls since they have high prevalence of headache, frequent headache episodes and a poor outcome. In children with headache, diagnoses and treatment should be reassessed regularly and other pains should be asked about and treated as well. </p>
307

Predictive Factors in Esophageal Carcinoma

Dreilich, Martin January 2006 (has links)
<p>Esophageal carcinoma is a malignancy with a poor prognosis and is the sixth cause of cancer related death worldwide. In Sweden approximately 400 new cases are diagnosed every year. The aim of this present thesis was to investigate predictive factors for esophageal carcinoma patients.126 esophageal carcinoma patients admitted to the department of Oncology at the University Hospital in Uppsala between 1990-2000 were investigated with focus on known and potential prognostic factors. Performance status and stage of the disease were the only independent prognostic factors (p-values <0.001). </p><p>Angiogenic factors VEGF and bFGF were correlated to platelet and leukocyte counts and VEGF was correlated to tumor volume (p=0.04) whereas bFGF was not (p=0.08) in pre-treatment serum samples from 42 esophageal carcinoma patients. The use of the angiogenic factors as prognostic factors, prior to therapy in patients with esophageal carcinoma, according to the results from the present study, seems limited. </p><p>HER-2 overexpression was seen in 17% of 97 investigated esophageal tumor samples. In squamous cell carcinoma patients, HER-2 overexpression correlated with poorer survival (p=0.035), whereas in adenocarcinoma patients, HER-2 status did not. HER-2 overexpression seems to be associated with poorer survival in esophageal carcinomas, especially in patients with squamous cell esophageal carcinoma. </p><p>Telomerase activity was detected in all esophageal cell lines, with a broad range of activity levels. No correlation was found between telomerase activity levels and sensitivity to investigated cytotoxic drugs. We therefore conclude that basal telomerase activity level is not a key determinant of sensitivity to standard cytotoxic drugs in esophageal carcinoma cell lines. </p><p>The virus HPV-16 was detected in 16 % of the patients; no other type HPV was detected. HPV-16 infection had no significant effect on survival (p=0.72). Our results did not show that HPV-16 increases survival or improve therapy response in patients with esophageal carcinoma.</p>
308

Diagnostic relapse in Borderline Personality Disorder: risk and protective factors

Quigley, Brian David 15 November 2004 (has links)
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is one of the more common personality disorder diagnoses observed in psychiatric inpatients and outpatients. Previous studies have found that individuals with BPD may be expected to experience difficulties throughout their lifetimes and they may repeatedly return for psychological treatment. Whereas previous studies have attempted to identify various factors related to relapse in other chronically recurring disorders such as depression, schizophrenia, and substance abuse, studies examining factors associated with relapse in BPD, and personality disorders in general, are absent from the scientific literature. This exploratory study examined whether specific risk and protective factors (dynamic and/or static) identified from the general relapse literature were associated with diagnostic relapse in BPD. Results revealed that variables related to an increased likelihood for BPD relapse included: substance abuse or Major Depressive Disorder, higher Neuroticism, and lower Conscientiousness. In addition, having a steady work or school status after remission was found to protect against a BPD relapse in the presence of various risk factors. Although this study has several limitations, these results provide some of the first insights to the processes of relapse and continued remission in BPD patients. Continued research efforts in this area can help to identify individuals who are at a greater risk for BPD relapse and potentially to design effective relapse-prevention strategies for the treatment of BPD.
309

Metastatic spinal cord compression in prostate cancer : clinical and morphological studies / Ryggmärgskompression vid metastaserande prostatacancer : kliniska och morfologiska studier

Crnalic, Sead January 2012 (has links)
Background: Bone metastases occur in most patients with advanced hormone-refractory prostate cancer causing pain, pathologic fractures, and spinal cord compression. Few studies specifically address surgical treatment of metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC) in prostate cancer. Criteria for identifying patients who may benefit from surgery are poorly defined. Most of the current knowledge regarding tumor biology in prostate cancer is based on studies of primary tumors or soft tissue metastases. The mechanisms regulating growth of bone metastases are not fully established. Aims: a) to evaluate outcome after surgery for MSCC in prostate cancer and to identify prognostic factors for survival and functional recovery; b) to evaluate current practice for referral of prostate cancer patients with MSCC; c) to analyze expression of androgen receptor (AR), cell proliferation, apoptosis, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in bone metastases with regard to survival after surgery for complications of bone metastases. Patients and Methods: We retrospectively evaluated the hospital records of 68 consecutive patients operated for metastatic spinal cord compression. Tumor tissue from bone metastases was obtained on spinal surgery (54 patients), fracture surgery (4 patients) and biopsy (2 patients), and analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Results: Study I: Mortality and complication rate after surgery was high. Patients with hormone-naïve disease and those with hormone-refractory disease with good performance status and without visceral metastases had more favorable survival. The ability to walk after surgery was related to better survival. Study II: A new score for prognosis of survival after surgery for spinal cord compression includes: hormone status of prostate cancer, Karnofsky performance status, evidence of visceral metastasis, and preoperative serum PSA. The score is simple, tumor specific, and easy to apply in clinical practice. Study III: Our results suggest that delays in diagnosis and treatment may have negative impact on functional outcome. Pretreatment ability to walk, hormone status of prostate cancer, and time from loss of ambulation influenced neurological recovery after surgery for spinal cord compression. Study IV: High nuclear AR immunostaining in bone metastases and high preoperative serum PSA were associated with a poor outcome after metastasis surgery in patients with hormone-refractory prostate cancer. Short-term effect of castration therapy disclosed that nuclear AR immunostaining was decreased and apoptosis was increased, but cell proliferation remained largely unaffected. Conclusion:  Prostate cancer patients with metastatic spinal cord compression represent a heterogeneous group. We identified prognostic factors for survival and functional outcome, which may help clinicians in making decisions about treatment. Our results also implicate the need for development of local and regional guidelines for treatment of patients with spinal cord compression, as well as the importance of information to patients at risk.
310

24-hour Ambulatory Blood Pressure - Relation to the Insulin Resistance Syndrome and Cardiovascular Disease

Björklund, Kristina January 2002 (has links)
This study examined relationships between 24-hour ambulatory BP and components of the insulin resistance syndrome, and investigated the prognostic significance of 24-hour BP for cardiovascular morbidity in a longitudinal population-based study of 70-year-old men. The findings indicated, that a reduced nocturnal BP fall, nondipping, was a marker of increased risk primarily in subjects with diabetes. A low body mass index and a more favourable serum fatty acid composition at age 50 predicted the development of white-coat as opposed to sustained hypertension over 20 years. Furthermore, cross-sectionally determined hypertensive organ damage at age 70 was detected in sustained hypertensive but not in white-coat hypertensive subjects. In a prospective analysis, 24-hour ambulatory pulse pressure and systolic BP variability at age 70 were strong predictors of subsequent cardiovascular morbidity, independently of office BP and other established risk factors. Isolated ambulatory hypertension, defined as having a normal office BP but increased daytime ambulatory BP, was associated with a significantly increased incidence of cardiovascular events during follow-up. Hypertension constitutes part of the insulin resistance syndrome, and is a common and powerful risk factor for cardiovascular disease in elderly. Blood pressure (BP) measured with 24-hour ambulatory monitoring gives however more detailed information and may be a better estimate of the true BP than conventional office BP. In summary, these data provide further knowledge of 24-hour ambulatory BP and associated metabolic risk profile, and suggest that the prognostic value of 24-hour ambulatory BP is superior to conventional BP in an elderly population.

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