scholarly journals In vivo Optical Diagnosis of Polyp Histology: Can We Omit Pathological Examination of Diminutive Polyps?

Author(s):  
Marco Bustamante-Balen
2011 ◽  
Vol 140 (5) ◽  
pp. S-119
Author(s):  
Neil Gupta ◽  
Deepthi S. Rao ◽  
Dayna S. Early ◽  
Steven A. Edmundowicz ◽  
Sreenivasa S. Jonnalagadda ◽  
...  

Endoscopy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (10) ◽  
pp. 899-923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evelien Dekker ◽  
Britt B. S. L. Houwen ◽  
Ignasi Puig ◽  
Marco Bustamante-Balén ◽  
Emmanuel Coron ◽  
...  

Main RecommendationsThis manuscript represents an official Position Statement of the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) aiming to guide general gastroenterologists to develop and maintain skills in optical diagnosis during endoscopy. In general, this requires additional training beyond the core curriculum currently provided in each country. In this context, ESGE have developed a European core curriculum for optical diagnosis practice across Europe for high quality optical diagnosis training. 1 ESGE suggests that every endoscopist should have achieved general competence in upper and/or lower gastrointestinal (UGI/LGI) endoscopy before commencing training in optical diagnosis of the UGI/LGI tract, meaning personal experience of at least 300 UGI and/or 300 LGI endoscopies and meeting the ESGE quality measures for UGI/LGI endoscopy. ESGE suggests that every endoscopist should be able and competent to perform UGI/LGI endoscopy with high definition white light combined with virtual and/or dye-based chromoendoscopy before commencing training in optical diagnosis. 2 ESGE suggests competency in optical diagnosis can be learned by attending a validated optical diagnosis training course based on a validated classification, and self-learning with a minimum number of lesions. If no validated training course is available, optical diagnosis can only be learned by attending a non-validated onsite training course and self-learning with a minimum number of lesions. 3 ESGE suggests endoscopists are competent in optical diagnosis after meeting the pre-adoption and learning criteria, and meeting competence thresholds by assessing a minimum number of lesions prospectively during real-time endoscopy. ESGE suggests ongoing in vivo practice by endoscopists to maintain competence in optical diagnosis. If a competent endoscopist does not perform in vivo optical diagnosis on a regular basis, ESGE suggests repeating the learning and competence phases to maintain competence.Key areas of interest were optical diagnosis training in Barrett’s esophagus, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, early gastric cancer, diminutive colorectal lesions, early colorectal cancer, and neoplasia in inflammatory bowel disease. Condition-specific recommendations are provided in the main document.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3123-3123 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Lucas ◽  
Ryan B. Edwards ◽  
Michael D. De Lay ◽  
Derek A. West ◽  
Gerard Lozanski ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) is an incurable disease with limited therapeutic options, especially for high-risk populations such as the del(17p13) patient subset. Currently available therapies for CLL, even if effective, can have significant detrimental effects on remaining T cells, leaving patients at risk of potentially lethal opportunistic infections. New agents with unique mechanisms of action, independence of key resistance pathways, and selectivity for tumor cells are crucial to make an impact on patient survival. Silvestrol, a structurally unique compound isolated from the plant genus Aglaia, exhibited potent activity against several tumor cell lines and moderate in vivo activity in the P388 mouse leukemia model (J. Org. Chem. 2004, 69:3350; ibid. 69:6156). Based on these results, we tested silvestrol against tumor cells obtained from CLL patients. The LC50 (concentration lethal to 50% of cells relative to untreated control) of silvestrol was 6.5 nM at 72 hours by MTT assay. We performed assays to determine CLL patient cell viability at 72 hours with or without drug washout at various times. In these studies, silvestrol showed up to 50% killing at 72 hours with only a four hour exposure, and reached maximum efficacy with a 24 hour exposure. Silvestrol was similarly effective against cells from CLL patients with or without del(17p13). Furthermore, there was no significant difference in silvestrol-mediated cytotoxicity between lymphoblastic cells with a ten-fold overexpression of Bcl-2 relative to control cells. In MTT assays using isolated CD3+ or CD19+ cells, and in whole blood from healthy volunteers and CLL patients, silvestrol demonstrated substantially more cytotoxicity toward B cells than T cells. We then tested silvestrol using Tcl-1 transgenic mice, which are initially normal but develop a slow-progressing B cell leukemia very similar to human CLL. Lymphocytes obtained from spleens of Tcl-1 mice with leukemia were incubated ex vivo with 80 nM silvestrol and analyzed by flow cytometry. Silvestrol produced an 88% reduction in the B cell percentage after 24 hours with no negative effect on the T cell percentage (8% increase), in contrast to 1 μM fludarabine, which affected both B cell (22% reduction) and T cell (14% reduction) subsets. Non-leukemic mice of the Tcl-1 background strain were treated with 1.0, 1.5 and 2.5 mg/kg/day silvestrol for 5 days to determine a tolerable dose. Three of five mice treated with 2.5 mg/kg/day died at the beginning of the second week of treatment. However, none of the animals treated at 1.0 or 1.5 mg/kg showed signs of toxicity or weight loss even after two full weeks of treatment and were normal at pathological examination. Tcl-1 mice with evidence of leukemia as determined by elevated leukocyte counts and enlarged spleens were then treated with silvestrol at 1.5 mg/kg/day × 5 days for two weeks. Treated mice experienced decreased overall leukocyte counts relative to vehicle controls. Furthermore, CD19+ cell numbers and percentages diminished substantially while the T cells were only mildly affected. Additional leukemic Tcl-1 mice are currently being treated and studies are underway examining the mechanism of action of silvestrol in CLL cells.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15545-e15545
Author(s):  
Xiangdong Cheng ◽  
Zhiyuan Xu ◽  
Jiahui Chen ◽  
Chunli Zhang ◽  
Jianfa Yu ◽  
...  

e15545 Background: Patients (pts) with late-stage gastric cancer (GC) have a poor prognosis. Targeted agent combined with chemotherapy is expected to yield clinical benefits. Apatinib, a novel tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting VEGFR-2, improves outcomes in patients with metastatic GC as a third line of treatment. Hence, we aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of apatinib plus chemotherapy in vivo and in vitro. Methods: The MGC803 cell viability was assessed by CCK-8 assay, and the interactions between apatinib and conventional cytotoxic agents revealed by combined index (CI) values were calculated using Calcusyn 2.0 software. We also used a zebrafish embryo xenograft model to validate the synergistic interactions. Furthermore, 4 pts with late-stage GC were enrolled to receive paclitaxel (PTX)/S1 chemotherapy plus apatinib in conversion surgery. Apatinib was administered 500 mg once a day continuously, PTX 130 mg/m2 was given on day 1, and S-1 was administered at 80 mg/m2for 14 consecutive days, followed by 7 days of rest. Treatment was administered for 3-5 cycles, but the last cycle did not include apatinib. Results: Apatinib showed synergistic interactions with both PTX and 5-Fu in vivo (CIs < 1). The zebrafish embryo xenograft model also demonstrated that addition of 0.25 µg/mL apatinib significantly enhanced the tumor growth inhibition effects of 25 (38.39% vs. 11.77%, P < 0.001) and 50 ng/fish (43.58% vs. 17.88%, P < 0.05) 5-Fu, as well as those of 0.75 ng/fish (53.62% vs. 35.22%, P < 0.001) and 1.5 ng/fish (59.71% vs.46.73%, P < 0.01) PTX. Apatinib plus S1/paclitaxel chemotherapy was well tolerable before surgery. Objective response to preoperative SPA treatment was achieved in all pts. No posteroperative bleeding event or wound-healing complication was observed. No postoperative mortality occurred and morbidity was encountered. Pathological examination showed that all pts had grade Ib pathological response. Conclusions: The experimental data suggested that apatinib improves the efficacy of PTX and 5-Fu both in vitro and in vivo. Clinical evidence showed that combination of PTX/S1 chemotherapy with apatinib has promising efficacy and acceptable safety profile in late-stage GC, especially in the conversion surgery.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Rahbarghazi ◽  
Rana Keyhanmanesh ◽  
Fatemeh Mirershadi ◽  
Hossain Heiran ◽  
Hesam Saghaei Bagheri ◽  
...  

Abstract Background There are still challenges regarding c-kit+ cells therapeutic outcome in the clinical setting. Here, we examined of c-kit+ cells effect on the alleviation of asthma by modulating miRNAs expression.MethodsTo induce asthma, male rats were exposed to ovalbumin. Bone marrow-derived c-kit+ cells were enriched by MACS. Animals were classified into four groups (each in 6 rats). Control rats received PBS intratracheally; Ovalbumin-sensitized rats received PBS intratracheally; Ovalbumin-sensitized rats received PBS intratracheally containing 3×105 c-kit+ and c-kit- cells. Cells were stained with Dil fluorescent dye to track in vivo condition. Pathological changes were monitored in asthmatic rats after transplantation of c-kit+ and c-kit- cells. Serum levels of IL-4 and INF-γ were measured by ELISA. Transcription of miRNAs (-126 and 133) were assessed by real-time PCR analysis.ResultsPathological examination, Th1 and Th2 associated cytokines fluctuation confirmed the occurrence of asthma in rats indicated by chronic changes and prominent inflammation compared to the control group (p<0.05). Both c-kit+ and c-kit- cells were verified in pulmonary niche. Administration of c-kit positive cells had potential to changes INF-γ/IL-4 ratio and closed to the normal values compared to matched-control asthmatic rats (p<0.05). We also found that c-kit+ cells regulated the expression of miRNA-126 and -133, indicated by increase of miRNA-133 and decrease of miRNA-126 compared to cell-free sensitized groups (p<0.05). c-kit- cells were unable to promote any therapeutic outcomes in asthmatic milieu.ConclusionsIn overall, c-kit+ cells had potential to diminish asthma-related pathologies presumably by controlling the transcription of miRNA-126 and -133.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuan Chen ◽  
Lizuan Chen ◽  
Zeming Ren ◽  
Yeling Tong ◽  
Guanhai Dai ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stmn1 is over-expressed in almost all pathological stages during gastric cancer development, such as chronic atrophic gastritis, dysplasia, and gastric cancer. IM is an important precancerous lesion of gastric cancer, however, whether Stmn1 was up-regulated or down-regulated in this stage is still unknown. We aimed to evaluate the expression level of Stmn1 in IM in vivo and its relationship with important gene of IM named Cdx2 in vitro.EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: Wistar rats (n=12, sex in half) were gavaged with MNNG (167μg/ml) to induce IM model in stomach. After pathological examination with AB staining to confirm that the model was successful, relative expression level of Stmn1 was detected between normal group and model group using RT-qPCR. Human gastric cell line GES-1 was used to investigate whether Stmn1 influence expression level of IM essential gene Cdx2 by over-expressing or down-expressing experiments, RT-qPCR and western blot.KEY RESULTS: We have demonstrated that Stmn1 was up-regulated in IM model induced by MNNG in rats in vivo, and it could significantly up-regulate Cdx2 expression level in human gastric cell line GES-1 in vitro.CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: We demonstrated that Stmn1 was involved in IM in this model and it could up-regulating Cdx2 in human gastric cell line GES-1 in vitro. These results suggested that Stmn1 might be a potential biomarker or candidate treatment target of IM in stomach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 174 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuki Kato ◽  
Yutaka Tonomura ◽  
Hiroyuki Hanafusa ◽  
Kyohei Nishimura ◽  
Tamio Fukushima ◽  
...  

Abstract Drug-induced kidney injury is a serious safety issue in drug development. In this study, we evaluated the usefulness of adult zebrafish as a small in vivo system for detecting drug-induced kidney injury. We first investigated the effects of typical nephrotoxicants, gentamicin and doxorubicin, on adult zebrafish. We found that gentamicin induced renal tubular necrosis with increased lysosome and myeloid bodies, and doxorubicin caused foot process fusion of glomerular podocytes. These findings were similar to those seen in mammals, suggesting a common pathogenesis. Second, to further evaluate the performance of the model in detecting drug-induced kidney injury, adult zebrafish were treated with 28 nephrotoxicants or 14 nonnephrotoxicants for up to 4 days, euthanized 24 h after the final treatment, and examined histopathologically. Sixteen of the 28 nephrotoxicants and none of the 14 nonnephrotoxicants caused drug-induced kidney injury in zebrafish (sensitivity, 57%; specificity, 100%; positive predictive value, 100%; negative predictive value, 54%). Finally, we explored genomic biomarker candidates using kidneys isolated from gentamicin- and cisplatin-treated zebrafish using microarray analysis and identified 3 candidate genes, egr1, atf3, and fos based on increased expression levels and biological implications. The expression of these genes was upregulated dose dependently in cisplatin-treated groups and was &gt; 25-fold higher in gentamicin-treated than in the control group. In conclusion, these results suggest that the adult zebrafish has (1) similar nephrotoxic response to those of mammals, (2) considerable feasibility as an experimental model for toxicity studies, and (3) applicability to pathological examination and genomic biomarker evaluation in drug-induced kidney injury.


Theranostics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 2827-2842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingyu Zhu ◽  
Wei Chang ◽  
Linkai Jing ◽  
Yingwei Fan ◽  
Ping Liang ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1654-1654
Author(s):  
Benjamin Huang ◽  
Eugene Hwang ◽  
Anica M. Wandler ◽  
Ben Powell ◽  
Gideon Bollag ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive hematologic cancer characterized by clonal proliferation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells that exhibit impaired differentiation. Event free survival for patients with AML remains poor despite intensive myelosuppressive therapies and improvements in supportive care measures. This underscores the need for novel, biologically based therapies. Somatic mutations that deregulate epigenetic programs (e.g. DNMT3A, TET2, IDH1/2, EZH2, ASXL1) and signal transduction pathways (e.g., FLT3, NRAS, KRAS) frequently coexist in AML. While the former class of mutations is hypothesized to promote a chromatin state that is permissive for AML development and essential for leukemia maintenance, experimental data also suggest that signaling mutations play a central role in driving leukemic growth in vivo. Thus, simultaneously targeting the abnormal epigenetic landscape and aberrant signaling pathways in AML is a rational new therapeutic approach. Recent publications identified the bromodomain and extraterminal (BET) proteins, an important class of epigenetic reader proteins, as particularly promising therapeutic targets in AML. While these studies support the therapeutic potential of BET inhibition in AML, they have limitations. These include their dependence on exogenous overexpression of oncogenes, failure to inform potential combination therapeutic strategies, and a reliance on monoclonal in vitro systems that do not recapitulate the inherent genetic heterogeneity of human cancers. Methods: We previously generated a heterogeneous collection of murine AMLs by infecting Nras, Kras, and Nf1 mutant mice with the MOL4070 retrovirus, which exhibit distinct retroviral integrations that are maintained upon transplantation into sublethally irradiated recipient mice. We first established 15 mg/kg/day as the maximally tolerated dose of PLX51107, a selective and potent BET inhibitor, in sublethally irradiated mice in a C57Bl/6 x 129sv/J strain background. We performed pharmacokinetic analysis, which demonstrated excellent drug exposure at doses of 10 and 15 mg/kg/day. We next treated cohorts of recipient mice with PLX51107 (10 mg/kg/day) and in combination with the MEK inhibitor PD0325901 (PD901; 1.5 mg/day). Mice that appeared ill were euthanized and underwent full pathological examination. Despite continuous drug treatment, all recipient mice eventually succumbed to progressive AML. Results: We enrolled eight AMLs, including four with a Nras(G12D) mutation, two with a Kras(G12D) mutation, and two with Nf1 inactivation. Recipient mice received 450 cGy of sublethal irradiation followed by 2x10E6 leukemia cells via tail vein injection. Recipient mice were randomized to receive vehicle (n = 4 for each AML), PLX51107 (n = 5), or PLX51107+PD901 (n = 5). PLX51107 markedly extended the survival of recipients transplanted with Nras(G12D) AMLs 6695, 6606, and 6613 that was further enhanced by PD901 (Fig. 1A). Whereas, PD901 resulted in a 1.5-fold increase in survival over vehicle-treated mice, PLX51107 alone resulted in a 4-fold increase in survival and PLX51107+PD901 in a nearly 6-fold increase in survival in this cohort of Nras(G12D) AMLs. Surprisingly, the response to PLX51107 was blunted in Kras(G12D) and Nf1 inactivated AMLs compared to Nras(G12D) AMLs. The observation of novel MOL4070 integration sites in relapsed AMLs provided definitive evidence of clonal evolution (Fig. 1B). Importantly, we went on to show that drug-treated clones emerging at relapse demonstrate intrinsic drug resistance by re-transplanting these leukemias into secondary recipients and re-treating them in vivo (Fig. 1C). Conclusion: PLX51107 shows impressive efficacy in a panel of primary AMLs treated in vivo that is further enhanced by PD901. The differential response between Nras(G12D) and Kras(G12D)/Nf(-/-) AMLs leads to the intriguing and unexpected hypothesis that the type of hyperactive Ras signaling mutation may influence the response to BET inhibition in AML. We are interrogating relapsed AMLs to identify and functionally validate candidate mechanisms underlying drug response and resistance through the use of established strategies to directly compare untreated and relapsed leukemias. Ongoing studies include assessing retroviral integrations and performing Western blotting, whole exome sequencing, RNA-seq, and ChIP-seq. Disclosures Powell: Plexxikon: Employment. Bollag:Plexxikon Inc.: Employment.


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