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1.
Eur J Radiol Open ; 9: 100436, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36061258

ABSTRACT

Osteoarthrosis is the most common form of knee arthritis, characterized by pain and discomfort from primarily articular cartilage wear. Traditionally in its end stage, it has been treated with total knee arthroplasty, a permanent process with a life span of ten to fifteen years and challenges with revision. With an increasing longevity and epidemic of obesity that the population is facing, naturally, we are seeing more and more patients with osteoarthrosis at a younger age. This makes it imperative to extend the life of the native knee by conservative measures, injections of steroid, hyaluronic acid, or biologicals and finally a slew of surgical alternatives ranging from joint realignment to partial and total joint replacement. Besides the clinical presentation, decisions are made based on joint alignment, extent and degree of cartilage wear and the status of the subchondral bone. Imaging plays an invaluable role in surgical decision making. In this article, we will discuss how imaging is used in our practice during decision making for the management of the young osteoarthritic knee.

2.
Front Oncol ; 12: 814895, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35719994

ABSTRACT

Objective: Extra Nodal Extension (ENE) assessment in locally advanced head and neck cancers (LAHNCC) treated with concurrent chemo radiotherapy (CCRT) is challenging and hence the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) N staging. We hypothesized that radiology-based ENE (rENE) may directly impact outcomes in LAHNSCC treated with radical CCRT. Materials and Methods: Open-label, investigator-initiated, randomized controlled trial (RCT) (2012-2018), which included LAHNSCC planned for CCRT. Patients were randomized 1:1 to radical radiotherapy (66-70 grays) with concurrent weekly cisplatin (30 mg/m2) [cisplatin radiation arm (CRT)] or same schedule of CRT with weekly nimotuzumab (200 mg) [nimotuzumab plus CRT (NCRT)]. A total of 536 patients were accrued and 182 were excluded due to the non-availability of Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) computed tomography (CT) data. A total of 354 patients were analyzed for rENE. Metastatic nodes were evaluated based on five criteria and further classified as rENE as positive/negative based on three-criteria capsule irregularity with fat stranding, fat invasion, and muscle/vessel invasion. We evaluated the association of rENE and disease-free survival (DFS), loco-regional recurrence-free survival (LRRFS), and overall survival (OS). Results: A total of 244 (68.9%) patients had radiologically metastatic nodes (rN), out of which 140 (57.3%) had rENE. Distribution of rENE was balanced in the two study groups CRT or NCRT (p-value 0.412). The median follow-up period was 39 months (ranging from 35.5 to 42.8 months). Complete response (CR) was seen in 204 (57.6%); incomplete response (IR), i.e., partial response plus stable disease (PR + SD), in 126 (35.6%); and progressive disease (PD) in 24 (6.8%). rENE-positive group had poor survival compared to rENE-negative group 3-year OS (46.7% vs. 63.6%), poor DFS (48.8% vs. 87%), and LRRFS (39.9% vs. 60.4%). rENE positive had 1.71 times increased risk of IR than rENE negative. Overall stage, site, clinical metastatic node (cN), response, and rENE were the significant factors for predicting OS, DFS, and LRRFS on univariate analysis. After making adjustment on multivariate analysis, rENE was an independent prognostic factor for DFS and trending to be significant for OS. Conclusion: Pre-treatment rENE is an independent prognostic marker for survival in patients with LAHNSCC treated radically with CCRT that can be used as a potential predictive marker for response to treatment and hence stratify patients into responders vs. non-responders. We propose the mahajan rENE grading system applicable on CT, magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography-contrast-enhanced CT, and ultrasound.

3.
Indian J Radiol Imaging ; 31(3): 560-565, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34790298

ABSTRACT

Background Presence of extramural venous invasion (EMVI) is a poor prognostic factor for rectal cancer as per literature. However, India-specific data are lacking. Aim The aim of the study is to determine the prognostic significance of EMVI in locally advanced rectal cancer on baseline MRI. Materials and Methods We retrospectively reviewed 117 MRIs of operable non-metastatic locally advanced rectal cancers in a tertiary cancer institute. Three dedicated oncoradiologists determined presence or absence of EMVI, and its length and thickness, in consensus. These patients were treated as per standard institutional protocols and followed up for a median period of 37 months (range: 2-71 months). Kaplan-Meier curves (95% CI) were used to determine disease-free survival (DFS), distant-metastases free survival (DMFS), and overall survival (OS). Univariate analysis was performed by comparing groups with log-rank test. Results EMVI positive cases were 34/114 (29%). More EMVI-positive cases developed distant metastasis compared with EMVI-negative cases (14/34-41% vs. 22/83-26%). The difference, however, was not statistically significant ( p = 0.146). After excluding signet-ring cell cancers ( n = 14), EMVI showed significant correlation with DMFS ( p = 0.046), but not with DFS or OS. The median thickness and length of EMVI was 6 and 14 mm, respectively in patients who developed distant metastasis, as compared with 5 and 11 mm in those who did not, although this difference was not statistically significant. Conclusion EMVI is a predictor of distant metastasis in locally advanced non-metastatic, non-signet ring cell rectal cancers. EMVI can be considered another high-risk feature to predict distant metastasis.

4.
Indian J Radiol Imaging ; 31(3): 605-610, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34790305

ABSTRACT

Aim To demonstrate the role of radiographs and ultrasound (USG) in the diagnosis of calcific tendinitis and periarthritis in the wrist and hand and the efficacy of USG-guided barbotage for its management. Materials and Methods A retrospective chart review was performed in six patients who presented with acute-onset pain in the wrist and hand varying from 3 days to 2 weeks. Four patients had tenderness over pisiform and two patients had pain along the lateral aspect of the wrist and thumb. Radiographs and USG revealed calcific focus corresponding to the site of pain. USG-guided calcific barbotage and injection was performed for the same and pain relief was assessed immediately and through telephonic follow-up at 6 months using subjective satisfaction score. Data were analyzed using Microsoft Excel 2013. Results Four patients with tenderness over pisiform had flexor carpi ulnaris calcific tendinitis and two patients with pain along the lateral aspect of the wrist and thumb had first metacarpophalangeal calcific periarthritis and abductor pollicis brevis calcific tendinitis on radiographs as well as USG. In post-USG-guided calcific barbotage and injection, all patients had significant immediate and 6 months delayed relief in symptoms with excellent satisfaction scores. Conclusion Acute calcific tendinitis/periarthritis is a benign and self-limiting inflammatory condition. Radiographs are extremely helpful in identifying calcific focus. Ultrasonography in experienced hands is the best modality to identify, confirm the symptomatic calcific focus, and perform USG-guided intervention. USG-guided calcific barbotage is the simplest, quickest, and effective way to treat this condition and avoid compromised functional capacity.

5.
Skeletal Radiol ; 50(9): 1837-1843, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33683407

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of ultrasound-guided decompression in managing symptomatic mucoid degeneration of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective analysis of 55 patients who underwent ultrasound-guided ACL mucoid degeneration decompression between July 2013 and August 2019. Subjective satisfaction scores were gathered immediately post-procedure for all 55 patients; follow-up satisfaction scores (scale of 0-10, 10 being excellent) were gathered telephonically for 46 patients (83.6%) up to 63 months post-procedure. Follow-up duration of each patient was classified as short (1-6 months), intermediate (7-12 months), or long (more than 12 months) post-procedure. Forty-five patients (81.8%) MRI were retrospectively analyzed and classified into cystic (n = 13, 28.9%), mucoid (n = 11, 24.4%), or mucoid-cystic (21, 46.7%) types. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify associations between follow-up satisfaction score, follow-up duration, patient age, and type of ACL degeneration. RESULTS: All patients had immediate marked post-procedure improvement, with excellent (>7/10) satisfaction scores. Forty-six of 55 patients were telephonically followed up: 21 (45.6%) short-term interval, 18 (39.1%) intermediate term, and 7 (15.2%) long-term. Thirty (65.22%) patients had excellent and eight (17.4%) patients had average satisfaction scores at follow-up. Eight (17.4%) patients had poor post-procedure satisfaction scores within six months. There were no significant associations between immediate or follow-up satisfaction score and duration of follow-up, age of patient, or type of ACL degeneration. CONCLUSION: Ultrasound-guided aspiration, fenestration, and injection are an effective, safe, minimally invasive and radiation-free technique for management of mucoid degeneration of ACL with excellent immediate- and long-term results.


Subject(s)
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries , Anterior Cruciate Ligament , Decompression , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Knee Joint , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Retrospective Studies , Ultrasonography, Interventional
6.
Front Oncol ; 11: 752018, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35308806

ABSTRACT

Purpose: To study the pattern of mandibular involvement and its impact on oncologic outcomes in patients with gingivo-buccal complex squamous cell carcinoma (GBC-SCC) and propose a staging system based on the pattern of bone involvement (MMC: Marrow and mandibular canal staging system) and compare its performance with the 8th edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC8). Methods: This retrospective observational study included treatment-naïve GBC-SCC patients who underwent preoperative computed tomography (CT) imaging between January 1, 2012, and March 31, 2016, at a tertiary care cancer center. Patients with T4b disease with high infratemporal fossa involvement, maxillary erosion, and follow-up of less than a year were excluded. The chi-square or Fisher's exact test was used for descriptive analysis. Kaplan-Meier estimate and log-rank test were performed for survival analysis. Multivariate analysis was done using Cox regression analysis after making adjustments for other prognostic factors. p-Value <0.05 was considered as significant. Based upon the survival analysis with different patterns of bone invasion, a new staging system was proposed "MMC: Marrow and mandibular canal staging system". "Akaike information criterion" (AIC) was used to study the relative fitted model of the various staging (TNM staging-AJCC8) with respect to survival parameters. Results: A total of 1,200 patients were screened; 303 patients were included in the study. On radiology review, mandibular bone was involved in 62% of patients. The pattern of bone involvement was as follows: deep cortical bone erosion (DCBE) in 23%, marrow in 34%, and marrow with the mandibular canal in 43% of patients. Patients with DCBE and no bone involvement (including superficial cortical) had similar survival [disease-free survival (DFS) and locoregional recurrence-free survival (LRRFS)], and this was significantly better than those with marrow with or without mandibular canal involvement (for both DFS and LRRFS). Patients with DCBE were staged using the MMC, and when compared with the AJCC8, the MMC system was better for the prediction of survival outcomes, as AIC values were lower compared with those of the AJCC8. There was a significant association (p = 0.013) between the type of bone involvement and the pattern of recurrence. Conclusions: For GBC-SCC, only marrow with or without mandibular canal involvement is associated with poorer survival outcomes. As compared with the AJCC8, the proposed Mahajan et al. MMC staging system downstages DCBE correlates better with survival outcomes.

7.
Abdom Radiol (NY) ; 46(2): 498-505, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32813028

ABSTRACT

AIM: Assessing metastatic mesorectal nodal involvement is a challenge in rectal cancer, especially in the post chemoradiation setting. We aim to assess the accuracy of MRI for nodal restaging and the validity of SAR criteria (≥ 5 mm size being metastatic). MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was an IRB-approved retrospective study of 166 patients with locally advanced rectal cancers, operated after neoadjuvant treatment. Two dedicated oncoradiologists reviewed the 166 post-chemoradiation presurgical MRIs in consensus. Nodal size and morphology (shape, margins, and signal intensity) were noted. The most accurate cut-off for size for predicting positive pN status was determined using the Youden index. RESULTS: MRI understaged 30/166 (18%) and overstaged 40/166 (24%) patients using the SAR criteria. The most accurate cut-off for node size was 5.5 mm, with a sensitivity of 75%, specificity of 60.2%, PPV of 40.7%, NPV of 86.9% (95% CI:78-92.5%), accuracy of 64.2%, and area under the curve (AUC) 0.657 (95% CI-0.524-0.79). Morphological characteristics were not significant to determine involvement, with positive nodes including 42% of round and 31% of oval nodes, 40% of heterogeneous and 45% of homogeneous nodes, and 31% irregularly marginated and 46% nodes with regular margins being positive on pathology. MRI was accurate in predicting pathology for mucinous nodes in 9/29 (31%) cases. Seven cases which were yN2 on MRI and yN0 on pathology demonstrated mucinous changes on MRI and had acellular mucin on histopathology. CONCLUSIONS: MRI has good negative predictive value, poor positive predictive value and moderate accuracy in nodal restaging. The cut-off of 5.5 mm demonstrated in our study is close to the SAR cut-off of 5 mm in the post-treatment setting. MRI accuracy is lower in patients with mucinous nodes.


Subject(s)
Rectal Neoplasms , Chemoradiotherapy , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neoplasm Staging , Rectal Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Rectal Neoplasms/pathology , Retrospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity
8.
Ecancermedicalscience ; 14: 1136, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33281928

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Management of brain metastasis is a complex multidisciplinary venture. Hence, we started a multidisciplinary brain metastasis clinic for the opinion on difficult brain metastasis cases. This is the review of the impact of this clinic on the treatment decisions. METHODS: The brain metastasis clinic (BMC) was started in April 2018 and meets once a week. Data of patients discussed between 27th April 2018 and 28th June 2019 were included for this analysis. Treatment decision made by clinicians (before sending the patient to the BMC) was compared with the decisions made in BMC. The decisions were broken on a predefined proforma as the intent of treatment (curative or palliative), modalities planned (surgery, radiation, chemotherapy) and type of therapy planned (details of each therapy) in each modality were collected both pre and post BMCs. In addition, compliance of the respective physicians to BMC decision was also calculated. SPSS version 20 was used for analysis. Descriptive statistics were performed. RESULTS: Ninety-nine patients were discussed in this time period. The median age was 51 (range 17-68) years. The gender distribution was 70 males (70.7%) and 29 females (29.3%). Lung was the predominant site of malignancy (79, 79.8%). Thirty-one patients (31.3%) had EGFR TKI domain activating mutation, while 17 (17.2%) had anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) rearrangement. The treatment plan was changed in 46 patients (46.5%). The intent of treatment was changed from palliative to curative in 5%. Change in the treatment plan with respect to surgery in 9.1%, radiation in 37.4%, chemotherapy in15.2%, targeted therapy in 22.9% and intrathecal in 6.1% patients, respectively. The compliance with the BMC decision in patients in whom it was changed was 84.8% (39, n = 46). CONCLUSION: Multidisciplinary management of difficult brain metastasis cases in specialised clinics has a significant impact on treatment decisions.

11.
Cancer Med ; 9(13): 4676-4685, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32400117

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Relapsed high-grade glioma has dismal outcomes. Mebendazole has shown promising activity against glioma in in-vitro and in-vivo studies. Hence, we undertook a phase 1 study to repurpose mebendazole in the treatment of glioblastoma. METHODS: We conducted a phase 1 study (accelerated titrated design 4) of mebendazole in patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM). Patients eligible for re-irradiation were enrolled in arm A1 (radiation with concurrent temozolomide 75 mg/m2 daily during the course of radiation+mebendazole) while patients who were ineligible were enrolled in either arm B1 (CCNU 110 mg/m2 day 1, every 6 weekly + mebendazole) or arm C1 (temozolomide 200 mg/m2 day 1-5, every 4 weekly + mebendazole). The primary endpoint of phase 1 was to identify the MTD of mebendazole in each combination. FINDINGS: 11 patients were enrolled in the whole study. MTD of mebendazole was not reached in arm A1 and C1 and hence the recommended dose for phase 2 was 1600 mg TDS (4800 mg) per day. The MTD of mebendazole in combination with CCNU was 1600 mg TDS (4800 mg) per day and the dose recommended for phase 2 was 800 mg TDS (2400 mg) per day. The three most common adverse events seen in the study were anemia (n = 9, 81.8%), nausea (n = 7, 63.6%), and fatigue (n = 6, 55.5%). INTERPRETATION: The recommended phase 2 dose of mebendazole is 1600 mg TDS with temozolomide and temozolomide-radiation combination while the dose of 800 mg TDS needs to be used with single-agent CCNU.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/administration & dosage , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , Brain Neoplasms/drug therapy , Drug Repositioning , Glioblastoma/drug therapy , Mebendazole/administration & dosage , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/drug therapy , Adult , Aged , Antiemetics/administration & dosage , Antineoplastic Agents/adverse effects , Brain Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Female , Glioblastoma/radiotherapy , Humans , Lomustine/administration & dosage , Male , Maximum Tolerated Dose , Mebendazole/adverse effects , Medication Adherence , Middle Aged , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/radiotherapy , Ondansetron/administration & dosage , Re-Irradiation , Salvage Therapy/methods , Temozolomide/administration & dosage
12.
Oral Oncol ; 104: 104658, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32208340

ABSTRACT

This review aims at simplifying the relevant imaging anatomy, guiding the optimal imaging method and highlighting the key imaging findings that influence prognosis and management of oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Early OSCC can be treated with either surgery alone while advanced cancers are treated with a combination of surgery, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. Considering the complex anatomy of the oral cavity and its surrounding structures, imaging plays an indispensable role not only in locoregional staging but also in the distant metastatic work-up and post treatment follow-up. Knowledge of the anatomy with understanding of common routes of spread of cancer, allows the radiologist to accurately determine disease extent and augment clinical findings to plan appropriate therapy. This review aims at simplifying the relevant imaging anatomy, guiding the optimal imaging method and highlighting the key imaging findings that influence prognosis and management.


Subject(s)
Mouth Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Prognosis
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