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1.
Lung Cancer ; 84(2): 168-74, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24646832

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It is not clear whether or not the fate of patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) has improved. To better understand the course of disease, we aimed at documenting disease features at initial diagnosis, sequences of therapy modalities and outcome in consecutive patients over two decades. We postulated that SCLC patients might have benefitted from refined diagnosis and treatment options during the last decade. METHODS: All SCLC cases diagnosed at the Innsbruck University Hospital and associated institutions between 1991 and 2011 have been documented in detail in accordance with a prespecified protocol. RESULTS: A total of 484 patients diagnosed with SCLC were followed. The most important symptoms at initial diagnosis were cough, dyspnea and tumor pain in 55%, 51% and 44%, respectively. Patients who were operated during early stage of disease (n = 26) had a favorable 5-year, relapse-free survival (74%). A total of 112 patients with locally advanced disease were treated by radiochemotherapy in curative intent (RCT), and achievement of CR offered a chance of long term overall survival (OS), reaching 44% after 10-years. In the palliative setting (median OS in 304 evaluable patients, 9.7 months), a therapeutic progress in the more recent decade could not be observed. Parameters independently associated with favorable OS were: response to therapy and prophylactic brain irradiation in patients with RCT; and response, age < 70 years and absence of LDH elevation in the palliative setting. CONCLUSIONS: In this comprehensive view on SCLC, the findings on symptomatology, comorbidity, and spectrum of treatments may help to better understand individual courses of the disease. Overall, modern medicine failed to translate into substantial benefit of SCLC patients, except in patients in locally advanced disease receiving multimodal therapy.


Subject(s)
Lung Neoplasms/therapy , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/therapy , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant , Disease-Free Survival , Female , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Lung Neoplasms/mortality , Male , Middle Aged , Neoadjuvant Therapy , Palliative Care , Proportional Hazards Models , Quality Improvement , Retrospective Studies , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/mortality , Treatment Outcome
2.
J Breath Res ; 6(3): 036008, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22932429

ABSTRACT

Non-invasive disease monitoring on the basis of volatile breath markers is a very attractive but challenging task. Several hundreds of compounds have been detected in exhaled air using modern analytical techniques (e.g. proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry) and have even been linked to various diseases. However,the biochemical background for most of compounds detected in breath samples has not been elucidated; therefore, the obtained results should be interpreted with care to avoid false correlations. The major aim of this study was to assess the effects of smoking on the composition of exhaled breath. Additionally, the potential origin of breath volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is discussed focusing on diet, environmental exposure and biological pathways based on other's studies. Profiles of VOCs detected in exhaled breath and inspired air samples of 115 subjects with addition of urine headspace derived from 50 volunteers are presented. Samples were analyzed with GC-MS after preconcentration on multibed sorption tubes in case of breath samples and solid phase micro-extraction (SPME) in the case of urine samples. Altogether 266 compounds were found in exhaled breath of at least 10% of the volunteers. From these, 162 compounds were identified by spectral library match and retention time (based on reference standards). It is shown that the composition of exhaled breath is considerably influenced by exposure to pollution and indoor-air contaminants and particularly by smoking. More than 80 organic compounds were found to be significantly related to smoking, the largest group comprising unsaturated hydrocarbons (29 dienes, 27 alkenes and 3 alkynes). On the basis of the presented results, we suggest that for the future understanding of breath data it will be necessary to carefully investigate the potential biological origin of volatiles, e.g., by means of analysis of tissues, isolated cell lines or other body fluids. In particular, VOCs linked to smoking habit or being the results of human exposure should be considered with care for clinical diagnosis since small changes in their concentration profiles(typically in the ppt(v)­ppb(v) range) revealing that the outbreak of certain disease might be hampered by already high background.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , Exhalation/physiology , Smoking/physiopathology , Volatile Organic Compounds/analysis , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Breath Tests , Creatinine/urine , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Volatile Organic Compounds/urine
3.
J Breath Res ; 6(2): 027101, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22427487

ABSTRACT

Isoprene (2-methylbuta-1,3-diene) represents a precursor molecule of isoprenoids (steroids, terpens), and available data suggest that isoprene is related to cholesterol biosynthesis. Breath concentrations of isoprene have been reported to be altered in a number of clinical conditions. However, the physiological meaning of isoprene changes has not yet been established. Utilizing proton-transfer-mass spectroscopy, we analyzed isoprene concentrations (m/z 69, tentatively identified as isoprene) in breath samples in Tedlar bags collected from 79 lung cancer patients (23 females, 56 males). Results were compared to the concentrations of immune activation marker neopterin (ELISA, BRAHMS, Hennigsdorf, Germany), lipid parameters (routine enzymology) and C-reactive protein (CRP). Isoprene concentrations were median 92.5 ppb (25th-75th percentile: 79-131 ppb). There was no relationship with staging, grading or age, but isoprene concentrations correlated significantly with total cholesterol (rs = 0.281, p < 0.01) and LDL cholesterol (rs = 0.236, p < 0.05). There was no significant relationship between exhaled isoprene concentrations and HDL cholesterol (rs = 0.048), triglycerides (rs = 0.164) and CRP (rs = -0.115; all not significant). A significant inverse correlation existed between isoprene and neopterin concentrations (rs = -0.215, p < 0.05); the latter also correlated with total cholesterol (rs = -0.343, p = 0.001), HDL cholesterol (rs = -0.273, p = 0.01), LDL cholesterol (rs = -0.236, p < 0.05) and CRP (rs = 0.230, p < 0.05) but not with triglycerides (rs = 0.035, not significant). Results suggest that immune activation might play a role in the decline of isoprene which is probably related to lipid metabolic changes. Interestingly, similar relationships between elevated neopterin and decreased lipid concentrations have been reported earlier in other clinical conditions, e.g. in patients with HIV-1 infection.


Subject(s)
Breath Tests/methods , Butadienes/analysis , Hemiterpenes/analysis , Immunity/physiology , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Pentanes/analysis , Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Disease Progression , Exhalation , Female , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , Plants
4.
Pneumologia ; 49(4): 276-80, 2000.
Article in Romanian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11374389

ABSTRACT

The authors are revising the evolution of a female patient with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis which suffered an unilateral lung transplant. This was followed by a long list of complications (chronic reject reaction, gastro-enteritis, CMV and Herpes virus infection, bone fractures, recurrent respiratory infections etc). These events are analyzed, pointing out the attitude in the new post-transplant conditions.


Subject(s)
Lung Transplantation/adverse effects , Lung Transplantation/methods , Pulmonary Fibrosis/surgery , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Cytomegalovirus/isolation & purification , Cytomegalovirus Infections/diagnosis , Cytomegalovirus Infections/drug therapy , Female , Graft Rejection/drug therapy , Humans , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Lung Transplantation/immunology , Middle Aged , Postoperative Complications/diagnosis , Postoperative Complications/drug therapy , Treatment Outcome
5.
Int Arch Allergy Immunol ; 98(1): 89-92, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1624211

ABSTRACT

The diagnostic curriculum to clarify a case of farmer's lung in a fibrotic stage is presented, including clinical functional tests, X-ray, analysis of cellular elements recovered from bronchioalveolar lavage, determination of precipitating antibodies in the circulation, histological and immunohistological studies of transbronchial lung biopsies. The patient had precipitating antibodies against several species of hay molds, especially Micropolyspora faeni, and immune complex deposition in the lung. Elution experiments on frozen sections of the lung biopsies and subsequent administration of patient's serum- or mold antigen-specific antibodies combined with appropriate serum absorption experiments allowed the identification of the relevant antigen, i.e. M. faeni, in the deposited immune complexes. The immunohistological analysis of extracellular matrix components revealed an interstitial increase in procollagen and collagen type I and an even more pronounced augmentation of procollagen type III and fibronectin, i.e. a constellation characteristic for a chronic, active lung fibrosis that developed on the basis of an immune complex disease.


Subject(s)
Farmer's Lung/immunology , Micromonosporaceae/immunology , Adult , Antigen-Antibody Complex , Austria , Collagen/metabolism , Farmer's Lung/diagnosis , Farmer's Lung/pathology , Humans , Immunoglobulin E/immunology , Male
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