The present study indicates that Elental® is effective for ameliorating oral mucositis induced by (chemo)radiation in OSCC patients. Elental® was also associated with improved completion rates of (chemo)radiotherapy.
Oral mucositis is a common adverse effect of cancer treatment that can increase the risk for local and systemic infection. This prospective study was designed to evaluate the preventive effects of an amino-acid-rich elemental diet (ED), Elental ® , on radiotherapy-or chemoradiotherapy-induced mucositis in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients. Fifty patients were enrolled in this prospective study, who had received radiation (60-70 Gy) with/without chemotherapy [S-1, UFT, cisplatin (CDDP), docetaxel (DOC) plus CDDP, or Cetuximab]. The Elental ® group (25 patients) had received Elental ® during treatment, and the control group (25 patients) had not. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors related to abatement of oral mucositis. A comparison of the rates of completion of chemoradiation treatments as well as the nutritional or inflammatory status between Elental ® and control groups was performed. Multivariate analysis indicated that most of the patients who received Elental ® suffered from a lower degree of mucositis and showed significantly improved rate of completion of chemoradiation (no interruption) compared to the control group. There was a significant difference between the Elental ® group and the control group in terms of the mean change of C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in blood serum; however, there was no significant difference in terms of a mean change of body weight and total protein level in blood serum before and after chemoradiation. Our study shows that the Elental ® elemental diet could be useful for the treatment of oral mucositis induced by chemoradiation. Elental ® might also promote improved completion rates of chemoradiotherapy in OSCC patients.
Abstract. Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is the most aggressive of thyroid cancers whose treatment is not yet established and mortality is extremely high. Recent in vitro studies have shown that valproic acid (VA), a newly identified histone deacetilase (HDAC) inhibitor, induces apoptosis, modulates differentiation gene expression of thyroid tumors and enhances the sensitivity of anaplastic cancer cell lines to doxorubicin. We report a case of successful treatment of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma with a combination of oral valproic acid, chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin and doxorubicin, external and intra-operative radiation and surgery. Tumor volume decreased by 50.7% under CT measurement and 44.6% under sonogram measurement over the course of the treatment. No significant rebound of tumor size was observed between each cycle of chemotherapy. Serial cytology performed via fine needle aspiration (FNA) presented a rapidly changing profile of cell types, starting with anaplastic and proceeding through increasingly well differentiated presentations. Only microscopic remnants of ATC cells were found in the histological examination of the resected thyroid. Ga scintigraphy and whole body PET scan six months after surgery revealed no evidence of recurrence or metastasis. As of Nov. 22, 2008, the patient is alive and disease free two years after diagnosis. Case ReportCase A 51 year old male, in otherwise good health, presented with a rapidly growing nodule with mild tenderness on the right side of his throat. He noticed a vague discomfort in his throat on November, 15, 2006, but could not locate the tumor by palpation. By the time he visited his local ENT on Nov. 18, the tumor was not only palpable but also visible as a protruding mass of finger tip size. He was referred to Noguchi Thyroid Clinic on Nov. 22 by his ENT as a possible case of subacute thyroiditis. The thyroid mass was hard and immobile on palpation. Sonogram and rapid FNA revealed the tumor to be ATC. Computerized tomography on the same day showed a thyroid mass of 30 × 41 × 35 mm occupying most of the right lobe of the thyroid with involvement of the anterior neck muscle. The tumor presented with acute pain. There was no evidence of lymph node or pulmonary metastasis. White blood cell count was 8460/µl. The case gauged 1/4 in the Sugitani Prognostic Index. Tc-99m scintigraphy presented a defect in the right lobe of the thyroid compatible to sonogram and CT findings. The patient had no previous history of cancer or thyroid ailments. Clinical CourseThe patient was immediately admitted and started on 1200 mg of oral VA daily, the upper therapeutic dose for epilepsy, and pre-hydrated for chemotherapy
To evaluate the clinical applicability of galectin-3 and CD44 variant 6 (CD44v6) immunostaining in fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) of thyroid follicular tumors, 79 cytological specimens (35 follicular carcinomas and 44 follicular adenomas) were studied. The positive rates of galectin-3 and CD44v6 were 89 and 74% in follicular carcinoma, respectively, and 25 and 30% in follicular adenoma, respectively. There were no significant correlations between the expression of galectin-3 or CD44v6 in follicular carcinoma and characteristics such as capsular invasion, vascular invasion, metastasis, or tumor size. Positive staining of either galectin-3 or CD44v6 resulted in a diagnostic sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 52% for follicular carcinoma among follicular tumors. Immunostaining of galectin-3 or CD44v6 using cytological specimens can provide independent information on conventional morphological findings of cytology to distinguish follicular carcinoma from adenoma.
Cytological diagnosis in follicular neoplasms of the thyroid has to surmount some difficulties. Capsular/vascular invasions or metastasis are the histological criteria for follicular carcinoma (FC), and, on fine-needle aspiration (FNA) samples, marked cytological atypias are only observed in moderately to poorly differentiated FC, while they may be completely lacking in well differentiated angio- or capsulo-invasive FC. To clarify the cytological features and to improve the accuracy and reliability of aspiration cytology, 892 follicular adenomas and 82 FCs were reviewed. A macrofollicular pattern or large sheet pattern of follicular cells with thin colloid in the background were found to be indicators of follicular adenoma. Crowding or irregular arrangement of follicular cells were found to indicate microfollicular lesions but could not discriminate between benign and malignant conditions. High nucleo-cytoplasmic ratio, nuclear atypia, and coarse granular or dense chromatin were more important criteria for malignancy than nuclear grooves or intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions. The cytomorphologic features of the follicular neoplasms of the thyroid are described, and the difficulties encountered in the cytodiagnosis of follicular lesions are discussed at length.
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