Zoonosis has been suggested for hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection, but so far is based only on indirect evidence. We experienced a series of cases of HEV infection among people who had eaten uncooked ...deer meat 6–7 weeks before. On testing, a left over portion of the deer meat, kept frozen to eat in the future, was positive for HEV RNA, whose nucleotide sequence was identical to those from the patients. Patients' family members who ate none or very little of the deer meat remained uninfected. These findings provide direct evidence for HEV infection to be a zoonosis.
Abstract Purpose We conducted the study to assess the feasibility and efficacy of gemcitabine-concurrent proton radiotherapy (GPT) for locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC). Materials and methods ...Of all 50 patients who participated in the study, 5 patients with gastrointestinal (GI)-adjacent LAPC were enrolled in P-1 (50 Gy equivalent GyE in 25 fractions) and 5 patients with non-GI-adjacent LAPC in P-2 (70.2 GyE in 26 fractions), and 40 patients with LAPC regardless of GI-adjacency in P-3 (67.5 GyE in 25 fractions using the field-within-a-field technique). In every protocol, gemcitabine (800 mg/m2 /week for 3 weeks) was administered concurrently. Every patient received adjuvant chemotherapy including gemcitabine after GPT within the tolerable limit. Results The median follow-up period was 12.5 months. The scheduled GPT was feasible for all except 6 patients (12%) due to acute hematologic or GI toxicities. Grade 3 or greater late gastric ulcer and hemorrhage were seen in 5 patients (10%) in P-2 and P-3. The one-year freedom from local-progression, progression-free, and overall survival rates were 81.7%, 64.3%, and 76.8%, respectively. Conclusion GPT was feasible and showed high efficacy. Although the number of patients and the follow-up periods are insufficient, the clinical results seem very encouraging.
Background
Little is known about acute upper gastrointestinal (GI) complications associated with gemcitabine-concurrent proton radiotherapy (GPT) for inoperable pancreatic cancer. We investigated ...acute GI complications following GPT in patients with inoperable pancreatic cancer using small-bowel endoscopy.
Methods
This prospective single center observational study was conducted at the Hyogo Ion Beam Medical Center from January 2010 to January 2012. Ninety-one patients who had clinically and medically inoperable pancreatic cancer treated by GPT were analyzed. Endoscopic examinations were performed before and after GPT to clarify the incidence rates of radiation-induced ulcers, GI hemorrhage, and GI perforation associated with GPT.
Results
Post-treatment endoscopic examinations revealed that 45 (49.4 %) patients had radiation-induced ulcers in the stomach and duodenum. Of those, many ulcerative lesions were found in the lower stomach (51 %) and horizontal part of the duodenum (39 %), regardless of the primary tumor site in the pancreas. Neither GI hemorrhage, nor perforation, was found in post-treatment endoscopy examinations.
Conclusion
Approximately half of the patients treated with GPT for inoperable pancreatic cancer exhibited radiation-induced ulcers in the stomach and duodenum.
Background
Aspiration pneumonia is an emerging problem in patients receiving gastrostomy feeding. This study is designed to clarify the therapeutic effects of mosapride citrate and lansoprazole for ...prevention of aspiration pneumonia in patients receiving gastrostomy feeding.
Methods
The study subjects were 119 patients with dysphasia who required gastrostomy feeding. They were randomly assigned to the control (without medication), lansoprazole (15 mg, 1/day), and mosapride (5 mg, 3/day) groups. The number of days with fever (≥37.8 °C), vomiting, and antibiotics administration, as well as the occurrence of pneumonia were investigated during the 6-month observation period.
Results
The incidence of pneumonia during the observation period was significantly lower in the mosapride group as compared to the control (7/38 vs. 16/40,
p
= 0.038) and lansoprazole (vs. 20/41,
p
= 0.005) groups. The mosapride group also showed a significant decrease in days with fever and antibiotics administration as compared to the other groups. Multivariate analysis revealed that the presence of hiatal hernia was a significant risk factor and administration of mosapride was a significant preventive factor for pneumonia.
Conclusion
Mosapride has a preventive effect on occurrence of pneumonia in patients receiving gastrostomy feeding.
Background
The characteristics of symptoms reported by elderly patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) have not been fully investigated. We performed this study to clarify these ...characteristics in elderly patients with GERD.
Methods
The study subjects were 340 Japanese patients with symptoms of heartburn and/or acid regurgitation. All patients were investigated by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, and were asked about the presence of atypical GERD symptoms, such as an epigastric burning sensation, epigastralgia, epigastric discomfort, and abdominal fullness, as well as the time of day when bothersome symptoms occurred.
Results
Of the 340 patients, 161 were elderly (≥65 years old) and 179 were non-elderly (age <65 years). There were 158 patients without esophageal mucosal breaks, 147 with low-grade reflux esophagitis (RE; Los Angeles classification grade A or B), and 35 with high-grade reflux esophagitis (LA grade C or D). Elderly patients with RE reported typical reflux symptoms at the same frequency as the non-elderly patients, whereas elderly patients without mucosal breaks reported typical symptoms more frequently than the non-elderly patients without mucosal breaks. Both elderly and non-elderly patients with different types of GERD reported that their symptoms occurred most frequently during the postprandial period.
Conclusion
Elderly patients with GERD tend to show typical GERD symptoms frequently at the typical post-prandial time points in a day, irrespective of the presence of esophageal mucosal breaks.
Zoonosis has been implicated in hepatitis E virus (HEV) transmission. We examined wild boar living in a forest of Hyogo prefecture, Japan, and found HEV RNA in three of seven boars. A full-genome HEV ...isolate from one of them was revealed to be 99.7% identical to a previous isolate from a wild deer hunted in the same forest and to those from four patients who contracted hepatitis E after eating raw meat of the deer. These findings suggest an interspecies HEV transmission between boar and deer in their wild life, and that both animals might serve as an infection source for human beings as suggested previously.
Twenty five years after a Billroth II (B-II) procedure for an advanced gastric cancer, a 75-year-old man was referred for persistent abdominal pain and progressive anemia. Abdominal CT and ...small-caliber colonoscopy revealed advanced primary duodenal cancer of the horizontal portion. Although radical surgery was proposed, it was converted to exploratory surgery due to advanced permeation of the cancer. Positive examination of the afferent loop is necessary, if persistent abdominal pain or gastrointestinal bleeding occurs after a gastrectomy with B-IIor Roux-Y reconstruction.
Previous exposure to hepatitis B virus (HBV) and occult HBV infection may have an important role in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with chronic liver disease related to ...hepatitis C virus (HCV).
To prospectively study the association between antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc) and clinical outcomes in patients with HCV-related chronic liver disease.
Prospective observational study.
Kyoto University Hospital and 14 regional core hospitals in Japan.
872 patients with chronic HCV infection (597 with chronic hepatitis and 275 with cirrhosis).
Incidence of HCC on follow-up (from 1995 to 2005).
Only 846 of the 872 enrolled patients were followed. Hepatocellular carcinoma occurred in 237 of 846 patients (28.0%) during follow-up. Among patients with cirrhosis, HCC was diagnosed in 85 of 141 patients (60.3%) with anti-HBc and 58 of 129 patients (45.0%) without HBV-related serologic markers. Of 224 patients with chronic hepatitis who had interferon monotherapy, 92 (41.1%) had sustained or transient disappearance of HCV RNA. None of the anti-HBc-negative patients who had a virologic response to interferon therapy developed HCC, whereas cancer was diagnosed in 4 of 37 anti-HBc-positive patients (10.8%) with a virologic response to interferon. On multivariate analysis using a Cox proportional hazards model, anti-HBc-positive results on serologic testing was an independent risk factor in patients with cirrhosis (incidence rate ratio, 1.58 95% CI, 1.12 to 2.22).
The study included only 1 assessment of smoking and alcohol consumption at study entry and did not precisely determine the duration of smoking or alcohol use.
Anti-HBc-positive results on serologic testing are a marker of high risk for HCC among patients with HCV-related cirrhosis. Interferon therapy might be less effective in preventing HCC among patients with chronic hepatitis C who are anti-HBc-positive than in those with chronic hepatitis C who are anti-HBc-negative.