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Imagerie fonctionelle corps entier dans les hémopathies lymphoïdesLin, Chieh 11 December 2009 (has links)
Trois aspects principaux de l'imagerie fonctionnelle corps entier dans les hémopathies lymphoïdes ont été étudiés dans ma thèse. Nous avons d'abord démontré en étudiant 92 patients avec un lymphome B à grandes cellules que 14 patients (15%) considérés positifs sur l'analyse visuelle du FDG-TEP après deux cycles de chimiothérapie, auraient pu être reclassés comme des bons répondeurs si le pourcentage de réduction du SUVmax avait été mesuré. Dans un sous groupe de 80 patients, une deuxième étude a permis de montrer qu'après 4 cycles, l'analyse visuelle et l'analyse semi-quantitative SUV étaient équivalentes. Nous avons ensuite développé un protocole d'IRM fonctionnelle corps entier, utilisant une injection dynamique de Gadolinium et 5 stations d'acquisition. Cela a permis de mesurer les courbes signal-temps du rehaussement de la moelle osseuse et des lésions focales. Notre étude a permis d'optimiser un protocole d'imagerie dynamique corps entier après injection de Gadolinium, et de montrer que nous avions pu explorer avec succès 21 patients présentant un myélome multiple sous traitement, nous avons montré que cette nouvelle méthode d'IRM fonctionnelle corps entier avec injection de Gadolinium pouvait être utilisée pour évaluer la réponse du traitement. De plus, cette technique a aidé à détecter les lésions résiduelles actives de myélome après traitement alors qu'aucun signe clinique ou une immunoglobine monoclonale minime n'était présent. Le troisième aspect a été d'optimiser un protocole d'IRM fonctionnelle corps entier utilisant l'imagerie de diffusion avec asservissement respiratoire. Le but est de pouvoir mesurer le coefficient de diffusion apprent des lésions disséminées. L'étude pilote a été réalisée chez 15 patients avec un lymphome B à grandes cellules avant traitement. Nous avons aussi pu montrer les changements d'ADC après 4 cycles de chimiothérapie en considérant l'imagerie FDG-TEP/scanner comme imagerie de référence / Three components regarding whole-body functional imaging in lymphoid malignancies have been studies in this thesis. We first demonstrated retrospectively in a series of 92 patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) that 14 patients (15%) considered as positive on visual analysis on FDG-PET after only 2 cycles of chemotherapy could have been correctly re-classified as good responders by measuring the percentage reduction of maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax); in a subgroup of 80 patients, SUV-based assessment was equivalent to visual analysis at 4 cycles for patient outcome prediction. We secondly developed a whole-body 5-station dynamic contrast- enhanced MR protocol and time-signal intensity curves for the bone marrow and the focal lesions were successfully obtaines in 21 patients with plasma cell disorders included in the feasibility study; later in a pilot prospective study with 30 patients with multiple myeloma who received systemic therapy, we showed that this novel whole-body functional MR technique can be used to assess treatment response and helps to delect residual active disease after completion of therapy when clinically no or only minimum monoclonal protein can be identified. We thirdly optimized a whole-body diffusion-weighted MR protocol with respiratory gating in order to determine apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value on a whole-body scale. Pilot study was performed in 15 patients with DLBCL for both staging and response assessment at 4 cycles of chemotherapy, with FDG PET/CT as the standard of reference
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A Population-Based Perspective on Clinically Recognized Venous Thromboembolism: Contemporary Trends in Clinical Epidemiology and Risk Assessment of Recurrent Events: A DissertationHuang, Wei 05 November 2014 (has links)
Background: Venous thromboembolism (VTE), comprising the conditions of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is a common acute cardiovascular event associated with increased long-term morbidity, functional disability, all-cause mortality, and high rates of recurrence. Major advances in identification, prophylaxis, and treatment over the past 3-decades have likely changed its clinical epidemiology. However, there are little published data describing contemporary, population-based, trends in VTE prevention and management.
Objectives: To examine recent trends in the epidemiology of clinically recognized VTE and assess the risk of recurrence after a first acute episode of VTE.
Methods: We used population-based surveillance to monitor trends in acute VTE among residents of the Worcester, Massachusetts, metropolitan statistical area (WMSA) from 1985 through 2009, including in-hospital and ambulatory settings.
Results: Among 5,025 WMSA residents diagnosed with acute PE and/or lower-extremity DVT between 1985 and 2009 (mean age = 65 years), 46% were men and 95% were white. Age- and sex-adjusted annual event rates (per 100, 000) of clinically recognized acute first-time and recurrent VTE was 142 overall, increasing from 112 in 1985/86 to 168 in 2009, due primarily to increases in PE occurrence. During this period, non-invasive diagnostic VTE testing increased, vi while treatment shifted from the in-hospital (chiefly with warfarin and unfractionated heparin) to out-patient setting (chiefly with low-molecular-weight heparins and newer anticoagulants). Among those with community-presenting first-time VTE, subsequent 3-year cumulative event rates of key outcomes decreased from 1999 to 2009, including all-cause mortality (41% to 26%), major bleeding episodes (12% to 6%), and recurrent VTE (17% to 9%). Active-cancer (with or without chemotherapy), a hypercoagulable state, varicose vein stripping, and Inferior vena cava filter placement were independent predictors of recurrence during short- (3-month) and long-term (3-year) follow-up after a first acute episode of VTE. We developed risk score calculators for VTE recurrence based on a 3-month prognostic model for all patients and separately for patients without active cancer.
Conclusions: Despite advances in identification, prophylaxis, and treatment between 1985 and 2009, the disease burden from VTE in residents of central Massachusetts remains high, with increasing annual events. Declines in the frequency of major adverse outcomes between 1999 and 2009 were reassuring. Still, mortality, major bleeding, and recurrence rates remained high, suggesting opportunities for improved prevention and treatment. Clinicians may be able to use the identified predictors of recurrence and risk score calculators to estimate the risk of VTE recurrence and tailor outpatient treatments to individual patients.
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