Background-This study was designed to investigate whether the serum concentration of the carboxy-terminal propeptide of procollagen type I (PIP), a marker of collagen type I synthesis, is related to myocardial fibrosis in hypertensive patients. Methods and Results-The study was performed in 26 patients with essential hypertension in which ischemic cardiomyopathy was excluded after a complete medical workup. Right septal endomyocardial biopsies were performed in hypertensive patients to quantify collagen content. Collagen volume fraction (CVF) was determined on picrosirius red-stained sections with an automated image analysis system. The serum concentration of PIP was measured by specific radioimmunoassay. Compared with normotensives, both serum PIP and CVF were increased (PϽ0.001) in hypertensives. A direct correlation was found between CVF and serum PIP (rϭ0.471, PϽ0.02) in all hypertensives. Histological analysis revealed the presence of 2 subgroups of patients: 8 with severe fibrosis and 18 with nonsevere fibrosis. Serum PIP was higher (PϽ0.05) in patients with severe fibrosis than in patients with nonsevere fibrosis. Using receiver operating characteristic curves, we observed that a cutoff of 127 g/L for PIP provided 78% specificity and 75% sensitivity for predicting severe fibrosis with a relative risk of 4.80 (95% CI, 1.19 to 19.30). Conclusions-These results show a strong correlation between myocardial collagen content and the serum concentration of PIP in essential hypertension. Although preliminary, these findings suggest that the determination of PIP may be an easy and reliable method for the screening and diagnosis of severe myocardial fibrosis associated with arterial hypertension.
These results suggest that tissue metabolism of collagen type I is abnormal in SHR and can be normalized by treatment with quinapril. On the basis of our findings, we propose that serum PIP may be a marker of collagen type I-dependent myocardial fibrosis in rats with genetic hypertension.
Isolated pulmonary metastases from soft tissue sarcomas (STS) occur in approximately 20% of the cases. Chemotherapy and surgical resection are the current standard treatment options for these patients. Our goal was to identify any prognostic factors for these patients as well as to estimate their long-term survival rate. We examined a series of twenty-two consecutive patients with pulmonary metastases from STS, treated in our institution from 1996 to 2006. Univariate (log-rank and Cox-regression) analysis was performed to identify any significant prognostic factor. Five-year survival rates were estimated by using Kaplan-Meier methods. Four patients (18.2%) were alive without any disease, twelve patients (54.5%) died of disease and we lost all track of six patients (27.3%). Follow-up period ranged from 7 to 75 months. Median follow-up: 14 months, median survival: 19 months. Disease-free interval (DFI) (P=0.005), number of lung nodules (P=0.04) and histology type (P=0.01) were significant prognostic factors at univariate analysis. The overall five-year survival rate was 23.1%. DFI, number of lung nodules at surgery and metastatic histology are significant prognostic factors for patients with resected pulmonary metastases from STS.
Two cases of complete remission plus one almost complete and another partial response of undifferentiated, invasive epithelial malignant thymoma using the combination of cisplatin, vinblastine, and bleomycin (PVB), are reported in four patients treated with this combination. Radiotherapy was instituted after completing the fourth course of chemotherapy in three patients. One patient died from intercurrent infection after the fourth cycle of combination chemotherapy. Three patients remain free of disease at the end of the treatment program. PVB appears to be highly active in this disease and deserves more extensive evaluation in multicenter clinical trials.
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