Among patients with haematologic disorders, mucormycosis most commonly occurs in those with acute leukaemia or lymphoma who have developed neutropenia due to malignancy or to chemotherapy, and in transplanted patients receiving immunosuppressive treatment. Here, we aim to present a retrospective study conducted over a 5-year period (2001-2005). The study included 20 patients with haematologic malignancies with a proven mucormycosis admitted in Medical Oncology Divisions in Cukurova University Hospital. The most frequent sites of infection were paranasal sinuses (95%) and lung (5%). Antifungal treatment was empirically administered in 18 (90%) patients; 18 patients underwent radical surgical debridement (90%). The therapy was successful for only eight patients (40%). Eleven patients died within 1 months of the diagnosis of fungal infection: the cause of death was only by mucormycosis in four patients (36.6%), mucormucosis and systematic inflamatuar response syndrome (SIRS) in two patients (18.2%) and progression of haematologic disease in five patients (45.5%). At univariate analysis, the factors that correlated with a positive outcome from infection were the following: amphotericin B treatment, neutrophil recovery from postchemotherapy aplasia. At multivariate analysis, the factors that significantly correlated with recovery from infection were the liposomal amphotericin B treatment (p = 0.026), doses of L-AmB (p = 0.008) and the length of the treatment (p = 0.01), respectively. It seems to have increased in recent years. Although a reduction of mortality has been observed recently, the mortality rate still remains high. Extensive and aggressive diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are essential to improve the prognosis in these patients.
In this series, laryngeal preneoplastic lesions were evaluated by the classifications of the World Health Organization (WHOC), Ljubljana (LC) and squamous intraepithelial neoplasia (SINC) by multiple observers. The inter-observer agreement (IA) by WHOC for laryngeal lesions had been previously evaluated, but to the best of our knowledge, there are no data for LC and SINC. H&E stained slides from 42 laryngeal biopsies were evaluated by fourteen participants according to WHOC and LC, and SINC was additionally applied by 6. The results were analyzed statistically. The diagnoses which were favored by most participants for each case, according to WHOC, were as follows: squamous cell hyperplasia (n = 5; 12%), mild dysplasia (n = 11; 26.2%), moderate dysplasia (n = 12; 28.6%), severe dysplasia (n = 7; 16.7%), carcinoma in situ (n = 5; 12%), and invasive squamous cell carcinoma (n = 2; 4.8%). There was a significant difference between the participants for all three classifications; some participants gave lower or higher scores than the others. The mean correlation coefficients (MCC) of the participants were higher for WHOC compared to LC (0.55 ± 0.15 and 0.48 ± 0.14, respectively). The mean linear-weighted kappa (wKappa) values of participants were not significantly different (0.42 ± 0.10, 0.41 ± 0.12 and 0.37 ± 0.07 for WHOC, LC and SINC, respectively). The kappa values in this series are in agreement with those in previous literature for WHOC, and the similar results obtained for LC and SINC are novel findings. Although the MCC of WHOC was higher, as the wkappa was not significantly different, the findings in this series are not in favor of any of the classifications for better IA for preneoplastic laryngeal lesions.
Disparate entities may present with similar cytological findings in the H&N region. A detailed description of differential diagnosis should be given in the cytology report in suspicious cases. Repeated aspirations from different sites of the lesion may reduce the false-negative rate.
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