Our purpose is to assess whether genotypes of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) and estrogen receptor (ER) and their interaction influence changes in bone mass in postmenopausal Caucasian women with and without hormone replacement therapy (HRT). A population of 108 US Mid-West women who participated in a study of low-dose continuous estrogen/progestin was genotyped at the VDR BsmI site and the ER XbaI and PvuII sites. Adequate vitamin D and calcium nutritional intakes were assured in all the study subjects. For the 3.5-year duration of the study, we analyzed changes in bone mineral density (BMD) at the spine, femoral neck, distal radius, and the total body (total body bone mineral content, tbBMC). We adjusted for confounding factors, such as age and weight, in the analysis. We found that VDR and/or ER genotypes and/or their interaction generally had significant effects on the changes in the bone mass measurements in both the placebo and HRT groups. When a significant gene-by-gene interaction exists between VDR and ER genotypes, failure to account for them in analyses may yield nonsignificant results, even if significant genotypic effects exist. The amount of variation in changes in bone mass measurements explained by the total genotypic effects of the VDR and ER loci varies from approximately 1.0% (for the tbBMC changes in combined placebo and HRT groups) to approximately 18.7% (for the spine BMD changes in the HRT group). These results suggest that individual genotypes are important factors in determining changes in bone mass in the elderly with and without HRT and thus may need to be considered with respect to the treatment to preserve bone mass in elderly Caucasian women.
: Almost a quarter of nondiabetic trauma patients presenting with hyperglycemia were found to have elevated gHbA1C levels and ODM. Risk factors for ODM included advancing age and body mass index as well as being Native American. The hyperglycemia seen in trauma patients should not solely be attributed to the hormonal and metabolic response to injury; wider ODM screening for both acute management strategies and long-term health benefits is warranted.
Positive margins occur in 15 to 69 per cent of patients undergoing lumpectomy. The current study was performed to evaluate intraoperative ultrasound in patients undergoing lumpectomy for palpable breast cancer. A retrospective chart review was performed of patients with palpable cancer who underwent lumpectomy with intraoperative ultrasound from 2004 to 2009. Each patient was matched with two patients who underwent lumpectomy alone over the same time period. Matching criteria included tumor size, clinical stage, body mass index, age at diagnosis, and lymphovascular invasion or extensive intraductal component. Twenty-two consecutive patients who underwent lumpectomy with intraoperative ultrasound were matched with 44 patients who underwent lumpectomy without intraoperative ultrasound. In addition to matching criteria, the patients were similar with respect to ethnicity, insurance status, weight, predominant histology, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and Her2 status. Patients who underwent lumpectomy with intraoperative ultrasound were significantly less likely to have an involved margin (41 vs 9%, P = 0.01) and less likely to require a re-excision (34 vs 9%, P = 0.04). The lumpectomy volumes in the intraoperative ultrasound group were smaller than the volumes in the lumpectomy alone group. Intraoperative ultrasound can decrease the rate of positive margins and re-excision lumpectomy in patients with palpable breast cancers.
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