AJM300 was well tolerated and more effective than placebo in inducing clinical response, clinical remission, and mucosal healing in patients with moderately active UC. ClinicalTrials.jp no: JapicCTI-132293.
Purpose: The incidence of colorectal neoplasia has increased among patients with longstanding and extensive ulcerative colitis (UC).Therefore, surveillance colonoscopy has been widely recommended. However, there is controversy about the impact of cancer surveillance, and ways to improve its effectiveness are being sought. The estrogen receptor (ER) gene shows age-related methylation in the colorectal epithelium and is frequently methylated in colorectal neoplasia, suggesting that ER methylation occurs early in the process of colorectal tumorigenesis. Experimental Design: To clarify whether methylation analysis of the ER gene in nonneoplastic epithelium can help predict an increased risk for UC-associated neoplasia, a total of 105 nonneoplastic colorectal epithelia from 18 patients with longstanding and extensive UC, including 8 patients with neoplasia and10 patients without neoplasia, were analyzed. In all patients, multiple samples were taken from six regions of the colorectum.The combined bisulfite restriction analysis method was used to determine the methylation status of the ER gene. Results: The mean methylation level of the ER gene was 25.4% in the nonneoplastic epithelia from UC patients with neoplasia, whereas it was only 4.0 % in those without neoplasia (P < 0.001). The methylation level of the ER gene in UC patients with neoplasia was significantly higher than in UC patients without neoplasia throughout the colorectum except for the cecum. In UC patients with neoplasia, the mean ER methylation level in the distal colon (36.1%) was significantly higher than in the proximal colon (14.6%; P < 0.001).Conclusions: These results suggest that the analysis of ER gene methylation in nonneoplastic colorectal epithelium could have the potential to be a useful adjunct for identifying individuals with longstanding and extensive UC who are at increased risk of neoplasia and contribute to more effective cancer surveillance.
Although EPBD appears to be comparable to EST for removal of small common bile duct stones, mild postoperative pancreatitis is more likely to occur with EPBD than with EST.
BackgroundGastric endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) has gradually come to be recommended as the optimal treatment for early gastric cancer; however, one of the primary issues is postoperative bleeding. Although second-look endoscopy is conventionally performed to reduce the risk of postoperative bleeding, its benefit has not yet been clearly elucidated. The objective of this study was to elucidate the benefit of second-look endoscopy.MethodsA total of 459 lesions in patients were underwent gastric ESD from May 2004 to April 2013 at our hospital were included in the analysis. The patients were divided into those who had bleeding within 24 hours after ESD (immediate bleeding) and those in whom bleeding occurred 24 hours or more after the procedure (delayed bleeding); the underlying disease, age, lesion site, diameter of the resected specimen, and lesion diameter were analyzed to identify the risk factors for postoperative bleeding after ESD.ResultsPost-ESD immediate or delayed bleeding occurred in 23 of the 459 cases (5.0%). Second-look endoscopy was performed in 210 of 447 cases (47.0%) excluding 12 cases with immediate bleeding; in the remaining 237 of the 447 cases (53.0%), it was not performed. Post-ESD delayed bleeding occurred in 6 of the 210 cases (2.9%) and 5 of the 237 cases (2.1%), with no statistically significant difference between the two groups. Overall, the following factors were identified as the risk factors for postoperative bleeding: young age (P = 0.005), lesions in the L segment (P = 0.042), and large size of the resected specimen (P = 0.005). The risk factors identified in the immediate bleeding group were lesions in the L segment (P = 0.032), large size of the resected specimen (P < 0.001), and large tumor size (P = 0.011), and those in the delayed bleeding group were young age (P = 0.013) and concomitant renal disease (P = 0.011).ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that second-look endoscopy after gastric ESD may not be useful for preventing postoperative bleeding.
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