Blantonvincent0302
ires further research to determine which patients require imaging and intervention.
Reliable urine samples are of eminent importance when diagnosing urinary tract infections (UTIs) in children. Noninvasive procedures are convenient but likely to be contaminated. This study aimed to compare the diagnostic accuracy of urine samples obtained by the midstream clean-catch method (CCU) to urine obtained by suprapubic aspiration (SPA) and to evaluate the ability of urinary dipstick to predict true infection.
Retrospectively, data on children <2 years of age seen at our center for suspicion of UTI who had a CCU and a SPA performed the same day were included. Any growth in SPA was considered significant, whereas for CCU we tested 2 cutoff values of 10
and 10
CFU/ml, along with urinary dipstick results.
A total of 223 children were included. Using a cutoff of ≥10
CFU/ml, 16.6% of the cohort (37 cases) would be misdiagnosed if relying only on CCU. Using ≥10
CFU/ml, the rate was 24.6% (55 cases). Evaluating leukocyte esterase on urinary dipstick, a large difference between using CCU (sensitivity 94.7%, specificity 14.4%) and SPA (sensitivity 78.9%, specificity 82.2%) became obvious.
A large number of children will be misdiagnosed if relying on CCU specimens compared to SPA. Relying on a negative leukocyte esterase dipstick test to rule out a UTI is not sufficient in a child with high suspicion of such an infection. SPA is a safe procedure, and we thus recommend its use to avoid delay of treatment and unnecessary invasive followup investigations.
A large number of children will be misdiagnosed if relying on CCU specimens compared to SPA. Relying on a negative leukocyte esterase dipstick test to rule out a UTI is not sufficient in a child with high suspicion of such an infection. SPA is a safe procedure, and we thus recommend its use to avoid delay of treatment and unnecessary invasive followup investigations.
Presence of teratoma in the orchiectomy and residual retroperitoneal mass size are known predictors of finding teratoma during postchemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (PC-RPLND). We sought to determine if the percentage of teratoma in the orchiectomy specimen could better stratify the risk of teratoma in the retroperitoneum.
The Indiana University Testis Cancer Database was reviewed to identify patients who underwent PC-RPLND for nonseminomatous germ cell tumors from 2010 to 2018. A logistic regression model was fit to predict the presence of retroperitoneal teratoma using teratoma and yolk sac tumor in the orchiectomy, residual mass size and log transformed values of prechemotherapy alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and beta-human chorionic gonadotropin. The study cohort was split into 60% training and 40% validation sets using 200 bootstraps. A predictive nomogram was developed for predicting teratoma in the retroperitoneum.
A total of 422 men were included. Presence of teratoma in the orchiectomy (OR 1.02, p <0.001), residual mass size (OR 1.16, p <0.001) and log transformed prechemotherapy AFP (OR 1.12, p=0.002) were predictive factors for having teratoma in the retroperitoneum. The C-statistic using this model demonstrated a predictive ability of 0.77. Training set C-statistic was 0.78 compared to 0.75 for the validation set. Adenosine disodium triphosphate solubility dmso A nomogram was developed to aid in clinical utility.
The model better predicts patients at higher risk for teratoma in the retroperitoneum following chemotherapy, which can aid in a more informed referral for surgical resection.
The model better predicts patients at higher risk for teratoma in the retroperitoneum following chemotherapy, which can aid in a more informed referral for surgical resection.
Ejaculatory dysfunction (EjD) and erectile dysfunction after cancer treatment are clinically important complications, but their exact prevalence by various kinds of cancer site and type of treatment is unknown. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to examine the available evidence and provide pooled estimates for prevalence of EjD and erectile dysfunction in relation to all cancer sites and identify characteristics associated with EjD in cancer patients.
We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of cross-sectional and case-control studies. We searched 4 electronic databases (Medline®, CINAHL, PsychInfo and Embase®) until July 22, 2020. All retrospective or prospective studies reporting the prevalence of EjD in male patients with cancer were included in this review. A random effects meta-analysis was conducted calculating prevalence proportions with 95% confidence intervals. Prevalence proportions were calculated for the incidences of EjD by cancer site and type of treatment.
A total of 64 studies (a total of 10,057 participants) were included for analysis. The most common cancer sites were bladder, colon, testis and rectum. The prevalence rates of EjD after surgical intervention ranged from 14.5% (95% CI 2.2-56.3) in colon cancer to 53.0% (95% CI 23.3-80.7) in bladder cancer. The prevalence rates of erectile dysfunction ranged from 6.8% (95% CI 0.8-39.1) in bladder cancer to 68.7% (95% CI 55.2-79.6) in cancer of the rectum.
In a large study-level meta-analysis, we looked at a high prevalence of EjD and erectile dysfunction at various cancer sites and across different treatment types. Prospective studies of EjD and erectile dysfunction after various kinds of cancer treatments are warranted.
In a large study-level meta-analysis, we looked at a high prevalence of EjD and erectile dysfunction at various cancer sites and across different treatment types. Prospective studies of EjD and erectile dysfunction after various kinds of cancer treatments are warranted.
In vitro experiments demonstrate calcium oxalate (CaOx) supersaturation (SS) drives CaOx nucleation and growth. We investigated the link between 24-hour urine SS CaOx and in vivo stone growth through a natural history, imaging study.
Using an institutional review board-approved database, we sought >80% CaOx stone formers who prior to stone intervention obtained 2 separate computerized tomography (CT) scans with at least one 24-hour urine collection between scans. Two blinded reviewers calculated bilateral 3-dimensional stone volume using the Visage 7® region of interest pen tool. CT volume difference was divided by time between scans, and SS CaOx was grouped into low (<5), medium (5-10) and high risk (>10). Statistical significance between groups was assessed by Kruskal-Wallis test.
We identified 80 individuals with stone growth measured by 3-dimensional CT (mean ∼7 months between studies). Inter-reviewer reliability of CT volume measurement was well correlated (0.98, Gwet's AC2), and an arbitrator was only needed in 13/160 (8%) cases.