Background
It is still unclear whether D2 lymphadenectomy improves the survival of patients with gastric cancer and should therefore be performed routinely or selectively. The aim of this multicentre ...randomized trial was to compare D2 and D1 lymphadenectomy in the treatment of gastric cancer.
Methods
Between June 1998 and December 2006, patients with gastric adenocarcinoma were assigned randomly to either D1 or D2 gastrectomy. Intraoperative randomization was implemented centrally by telephone. Primary outcome was overall survival; secondary endpoints were disease‐specific survival, morbidity and postoperative mortality.
Results
A total of 267 eligible patients were allocated to either D1 (133 patients) or D2 (134) resection. Morbidity (12·0 versus 17·9 per cent respectively; P = 0·183) and operative mortality (3·0 versus 2·2 per cent; P = 0·725) rates did not differ significantly between the groups. Median follow‐up was 8·8 (range 4·5–13·1) years for surviving patients and 2·4 (0·2–11·9) years for those who died, and was not different in the two treatment arms. There was no difference in the overall 5‐year survival rate (66·5 versus 64·2 per cent for D1 and D2 lymphadenectomy respectively; P = 0·695). Subgroup analyses showed a 5‐year disease‐specific survival benefit for patients with pathological tumour (pT) 1 disease in the D1 group (98 per cent versus 83 per cent for the D2 group; P = 0·015), and for patients with pT2–4 status and positive lymph nodes in the D2 group (59 per cent versus 38 per cent for the D1 group; P = 0·055).
Conclusion
No difference was found in overall 5‐year survival between D1 and D2 resection. Subgroup analyses suggest that D2 lymphadenectomy may be a better choice in patients with advanced disease and lymph node metastases. Registration number: ISRCTN11154654 (http://www.controlled‐trials.com).
No difference
The extended lymphadenectomy (D2) was recently introduced in several guidelines as the optimal treatment for gastric cancer, based only on the 15-year follow-up results of the Dutch randomised trial, ...while the British Medical Research Council (MRC) study failed to demonstrate a survival benefit over the more limited D1 dissection. The Italian Gastric Cancer Study Group randomised controlled trial (RCT) was also undertaken to compare D1 versus D2 gastrectomy, and a tendency to improve survival in patients with advanced resectable disease (pT > 1N+) was documented despite negative results in the entire patient population. Now we present the 15-year follow-up results of survival and gastric cancer-related mortality.
Between June 1998 and December 2006, eligible patients with gastric cancer who signed the informed consent were randomised at 5 centres to either D1 or D2 gastrectomy. Intraoperative randomisation was implemented centrally by phone call. Primary outcome was overall survival (OS); secondary end-points were disease-specific survival, postoperative morbidity and mortality. Analyses were by intention to treat. Strict quality control measures for surgery, lymph node removal, pathology and patient follow-up were implemented and monitored. Registration number: ISRCTN11154654 (http://www.controlled-trials.com).
A total of 267 eligible patients were assigned to either D1 (133 patients) or D2 (134) procedure. Median follow-up time was 16.76 years. Analyses were done both in overall patient population and in pT > 1N+. One hundred patients (38.5) were alive without recurrence. OS and disease-specific survival (DSS) were very high in both arms. In overall population, they were not different between D1 and D2 arm (51.3% vs. 46.8% and 65% vs. 67% respectively, p = 0.31 and p = 0.94). DSS was significantly higher after D2 in pT > 1N+ patients (29.4% vs. 51.4%, p = 0.035). OS and DSS were better after D1 in patients older than 70 years (p = 0.003 and p = 0.006). DSS was higher after D1 also in early stages (p = 0.01).
After 15-year follow up, despite no relevant difference in overall population, DSS and gastric cancer-related mortality of patients with advanced disease and lymph node metastases are improved by D2 procedure. Further data available from this trial suggest that D1 procedure should be preferably used in older patients and in early disease. As accurate detection of advanced diseases can be currently provided by adequate preoperative workup in referral centres, D2 procedure should be recommended in these cases.
Piedmont Regional fund for Finalized Healthy Research Project, Application 2003 for data collection.
•In overall population, the survival benefit of D2 dissection is not evident.•In resectable locally advanced GC, D2 dissection improves disease-specific survival.•Preoperative staging could identify locally advanced disease in referral centres.•D2 dissection is not necessary in early gastric cancer.•In older patients, D2 procedure is not superior and can be dangerous.
Cell migration initiates by extension of the actin cytoskeleton at the leading edge. Computational analysis of fluorescent speckle microscopy movies of migrating epithelial cells revealed this ...process is mediated by two spatially colocalized but kinematically, kinetically, molecularly, and functionally distinct actin networks. A lamellipodium network assembled at the leading edge but completely disassembled within 1 to 3 micrometers. It was weakly coupled to the rest of the cytoskeleton and promoted the random protrusion and retraction of the leading edge. Productive cell advance was a function of the second colocalized network, the lamella, where actomyosin contraction was integrated with substrate adhesion.
This article is an update of the requirements of a specialist breast centre, produced by EUSOMA and endorsed by ECCO as part of Essential Requirements for Quality Cancer Care (ERQCC) programme, and ...ESMO.
To meet aspirations for comprehensive cancer control, healthcare organisations must consider the requirements in this article, paying particular attention to multidisciplinarity and patient-centred pathways from diagnosis, to treatment, to survivorship.•The centrepiece of this article is the requirements section, comprising definitions; multidisciplinary structure; minimum case, procedure and staffing volumes; and detailed descriptions of the skills of, and resources needed by, members and specialisms in the multidisciplinary team in a breast centre.•These requirements are positioned within narrative on European breast cancer epidemiology, the standard of care, challenges to delivering this standard, and supporting evidence, to enable a broad audience to appreciate the importance of establishing these requirements in specialist breast centres.
•A novel literature review categorizing studies into applications with mobile sensors.•Investigates sensors, parameters, samples, and methods for detection and diagnostic.•Discusses elements to be ...addressed in futures studies on fall related events and its prevention with sensors.
wearable sensors are often used to acquire data for gait analysis as a strategy to study fall events, due to greater availability of acquisition platforms, and advances in computational intelligence. However, there are no review papers addressing the three most common types of applications related to fall using sensors, namely: fall detection, fallers classification and fall risk screening.
To identify the state of art of fall-related events detection in older person using wearable sensors, as well as the main characteristics of the studies in the literature, pointing gaps for future studies.
A systematic review design was used to search peer-reviewed literature on fall detection and risk in elderly through inertial sensors, published in English, Portuguese, Spanish or French between August 2002 and June 2019. The following questions are investigated: the type of sensors and their sampling rate, the type of signal and data processing employed, the scales and tests used in the study and the type of application.
We identified 608 studies, from which 29 were included. The accelerometer, with sampling rate 50 or 100 Hz, allocated in the waist or lumbar was the most used sensor setting. Methods comparing features or variables extracted from the accelerometry signal are the most common, and fall risk screening the most observed application.
This review identifies the main elements to be addressed in studies on the detection of events related to falls in the elderly and may help in future studies on the subject. However, some aspects are still no reach consensus in the literature such as the size of the sample to be studied, the population under study and how to acquire data for each application.
Curative resection is the treatment of choice for potentially curable gastric cancer. Two major Western studies in the 1990s failed to show a benefit from D2 dissection. They showed extremely high ...postoperative mortality after D2 dissection, and were criticised for the potential inadequacy of the pretrial training in the new technique of D2 dissection, prior to the phase III studies being initiated. The inclusion of pancreatectomy and splenectomy in D2 dissection was associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Following these results, we started a phase II trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of pancreas-preserving D2 dissection. The results of this trial regarding the safety of pancreas preserving D2 dissection were published in 1998. In this paper, we present the survival results of this phase II trial to confirm the rationale of carrying out a phase III study comparing D1 vs D2 dissection for curable gastric cancer. Italian patients with histologically proven gastric adenocarcinoma were registered in the Italian Gastric Cancer Study Group Multicenter trial. The study was carried out based on the General Rules of the Japanese Research Society for Gastric Cancer. A strict quality control system was achieved by a supervising surgeon of the reference centre who had stayed at the National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, to learn the standard D2 gastrectomy and the postoperative management. The standard procedure entailed removal of the first and second tier lymph nodes. During total gastrectomy, the pancreas was preserved according to the Maruyama technique. Complete follow-up was available to death or 5 years in 100% of patients and the median follow-up time was 4.38 years. Out of 297 consecutive patients registered, 191 patients were enrolled in the study between May 1994 and December 1996. The overall morbidity rate was 20.9%. The postoperative in-hospital mortality was 3.1%. The overall 5-year survival rate among all eligible patients was 55%. Survival was strictly related to stage, depth of wall invasion, lymph node involvement and type of gastrectomy (distal vs total). Our results suggest a survival benefit for pancreas-preserving D2 dissection in Italian patients with gastric cancer if performed in experienced centres. A phase III trial among exclusively experienced centres is urgently needed.
Current biomedical research increasingly requires imaging large and thick 3D structures at high resolution. Prominent examples are the tracking of fine filaments over long distances in brain slices, ...or the localization of gene expression or cell migration in whole animals like Caenorhabditis elegans or zebrafish. To obtain both high resolution and a large field of view (FOV), a combination of multiple recordings ('tiles') is one of the options. Although hardware solutions exist for fast and reproducible acquisition of multiple 3D tiles, generic software solutions are missing to assemble ('stitch') these tiles quickly and accurately. In this paper, we present a framework that achieves fully automated recombination of tiles recorded at arbitrary positions in 3D space, as long as some small overlap between tiles is provided. A fully automated 3D correlation between all tiles is achieved such that no manual interaction or prior knowledge about tile positions is needed. We use (1) phase-only correlation in a multi-scale approach to estimate the coarse positions, (2) normalized cross-correlation of small patches extracted at salient points to obtain the precise matches, (3) find the globally optimal placement for all tiles by a singular value decomposition and (4) accomplish a nearly seamless stitching by a bleaching correction at the tile borders. If the dataset contains multiple channels, all channels are used to obtain the best matches between tiles. For speedup we employ a heuristic method to prune unneeded correlations, and compute all correlations via the fast Fourier transform (FFT), thereby achieving very good runtime performance. We demonstrate the successful application of the proposed framework to a wide range of different datasets from whole zebrafish embryos and C. elegans, mouse and rat brain slices and fine plant hairs (trichome). Further, we compare our stitching results to those of other commercially and freely available software solutions. The algorithms presented are being made available freely as an open source toolset 'XuvTools' at the corresponding author's website ( http://lmb.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/people/ronneber), licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL) v2. Binaries are provided for Linux and Microsoft Windows. The toolset is written in templated C++, such that it can operate on datasets with any bit-depth. Due to the consequent use of 64bit addressing, stacks of arbitrary size (i.e. larger than 4 GB) can be stitched. The runtime on a standard desktop computer is in the range of a few minutes. A user friendly interface for advanced manual interaction and visualization is also available.
Abstract Introduction In recognition of the advances and evidence based changes in clinical practice that have occurred in recent years and taking into account the knowledge and experience ...accumulated through the voluntary breast unit certification programme, Eusoma has produced this up-dated and revised guidelines on the requirements of a Specialist Breast Centre (BC). Methods The content of these guidelines is based on evidence from the recent relevant peer reviewed literature and the consensus of a multidisciplinary team of European experts. The guidelines define the requirements for each breast service and for the specialists who work in specialist Breast Centres. Results The guidelines identify the minimum requirements needed to set up a BC, these being an integrated Breast Centre, dealing with a sufficient number of cases to allow effective working and continuing expertise, dedicated specialists working with a multidisciplinary approach, providing all services throughout the patients pathway and data collection and audit. It is essential that the BC also guarantees the continuity of care for patients with advanced (metastatic) disease offering treatments according to multidisciplinary competencies and a high quality palliative care service. The BC must ensure that comprehensive support and expertise may be needed, not only through the core BC team, but also ensure that all other medical and paramedical expertise that may be necessary depending on the individual case are freely available, referring the patient to the specific care provider depending on the problem. Conclusions Applying minimum requirements and quality indicators is essential to improve organisation, performance and outcome in breast care. Efficacy and compliance have to be constantly monitored to evaluate the quality of patient care and to allow appropriate corrective actions leading to improvements in patient care.
Oxide catalysts containing highly dispersed Fe phases supported on a mesoporous, high surface area silica, with iron in a wide range of concentration (4
<
Fe
2O
3 mass%
<
17), are presented. A suite ...of techniques was employed to determine the structural, morphologic, surface, electronic, acidic, and red-ox properties of the samples. Although the samples have great variation of the iron loading, they maintained good Fe-dispersion and low metal aggregation, even those with the highest concentrations of iron. By increasing the Fe-loading, the DR–UV–vis spectra showed that the band centered at 360 nm (low nuclearity 2
d-Fe oxo entities) became more intense, while the band at 500 nm (typical of 3
d-Fe
2O
3 nanoparticles) remained of low intensity and quite constant. Formation of significant amount of isolated Fe
3+ centers (band at ca. 230 nm) were also identified, in agreement with EPR evidences. The titrated amount of surface acid sites increased with the Fe loading, because of the increased amount of FeO
x
species, acting as Lewis acid sites. The test reaction of isomerization of
α-pinene oxide revealed the prominent presence of Lewis acid sites on all the samples with main formation of the
α-campholenic aldehyde product. The selectivity to
α-campholenic aldehyde was around 53% for all the catalysts, independent of the Fe-loading. However, productivity to
α-campholenic aldehyde increased with Fe-concentration, because of the increase of reaction rates as higher the Fe content was. Active acid Fe-sites could be associated with isolated Fe centers and in particular with low nuclearity 2
d-Fe oxo entities.
Fe oxide catalysts supported on a mesoporous, high surface area silica, with iron in a wide range of concentration (4 < Fe
2O
3
mass%
<
17
), are presented. A suite of techniques was employed to determine the structural, morphologic, surface, electronic, acidic, and red–ox properties of the samples. The samples maintained good Fe-dispersion and low metal aggregation, independently of Fe-concentration. The test reaction of isomerization of
α-pinene oxide revealed the prominent presence of Lewis acid sites on all the samples.