Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are a heterogeneous group of neoplasms whose biologic behavior is difficult to predict. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prognostic value in GIST of some oncoproteins involved in regulation of cell proliferation. Tumor size, mitosis, necrosis, and p53, c-myc, and bcl-2 protein expression of 32 GIST were studied. Proliferative index was assessed with Ki67. The 32 cases were grouped into the following clinical categories: (1) clinically benign (BN) were defined as disease-free survival greater than 3 years (n=10); (2) clinically malignant (MN) in which local recurrence or metastasis occurred regardless of the follow-up time (n=1 5); and (3) clinically indeterminate (ID) owing to follow-up <3 years without metastasis or local recurrence (n=seven). Discriminant analysis was used to allocate any tumor to one of the two prognostic groups (BN or MN). In univariate analysis all six factors studied above proved to be of significant prognostic value. Using a multivariate stepwise discriminant analysis to take into account the interrelationship between factors, we found that c-myc expression was the most important prognostic factor, followed, in order of statistical weight, by size and Ki67. These were combined to define a discriminant score ([10.75 x c-myc]+[0.39 x size]+[0.078 x Ki67]-15.54=score), which was capable of correctly identifying tumors in our series whose known clinical behavior was BN or MN in 92% of the cases. The classification score was applied subsequently to the seven clinically ID cases: Three (42.9%) were predicted as BN, and four (57.1%) were predicted as MN. Both expression of oncoprotein c-myc and the proliferative index provide prognostic information in GIST, in addition to morphologically established prognostic factors such as size. These factors in a discriminant analysis proved to be useful for the clinical classification of GIST into BN or MN and to predict the clinical outcome of clinically ID tumors.
Background Hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv) amyloidosis is a rare, inherited, progressive disease caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of long-term treatment with patisiran, an RNA interference therapeutic that inhibits TTR production, in patients with ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy.
MethodsThis multi-country, multi-centre, open-label extension (OLE) trial enrolled patients at 43 sites in 19 countries as of 24 September 2018. Patients were eligible if they had completed the phase 3 APOLLO (randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled [2:1], 18-month study) or phase 2 OLE (single-arm, 24-month study) parent studies and tolerated the study drug. Eligible patients from APOLLO (APOLLO-patisiran [received patisiran during APOLLO] and APOLLO-placebo [received placebo during APOLLO] groups) and the phase 2 OLE (phase 2 OLE patisiran group) studies enrolled in this Global OLE trial and receive patisiran 0•3 mg/kg by intravenous infusion every 3 weeks for up to 5 years. Efficacy assessments include measures of polyneuropathy (modified Neuropathy Impairment Score +7 [mNIS+7]), quality of life, autonomic symptoms, nutritional status, disability, ambulation status, motor function, and cardiac stress. Patients included in the current efficacy analyses are those who had completed 12-month efficacy assessments as of the data cut-off. Safety analyses included all patients who received ≥1 dose of patisiran up to the data cut-off. The Global OLE is ongoing with no new enrolment, and current findings are based on the 12-month interim analysis. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02510261.
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