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Malignant pleural mesothelioma: update on treatment options with a focus on novel therapies.
Clin Chest Med. 2013 Mar;34(1):99-111
Authors: Haas AR, Sterman DH
Abstract
There is evidence that improved treatments of malignant pleural mesothelioma are increasing the quality and quantity of life for patients with mesothelioma. Multimodality treatment programs that combine maximal surgical cytoreduction with novel forms of radiation therapy and more effective chemotherapy combinations may offer significant increases in survival for certain subgroups of patients with mesothelioma. Lung-sparing surgery may allow improvements in pulmonary function after surgery-based multimodality therapy, and potential longer overall survival than that seen with extrapleural pneumonectomy. Experimental treatments provide hope for all patients with mesothelioma, and in the future may be combined with standard therapy in multimodality protocols.
PMID: 23411061 [PubMed - in process]
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Correlation of Simultaneously Acquired Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and 2-Deoxy-[18F] fluoro-2-D-glucose Positron Emission Tomography of Pulmonary Lesions in a Dedicated Whole-Body Magnetic Resonance/Positron Emission Tomography System.
Invest Radiol. 2013 Mar 20;
Authors: Schmidt H, Brendle C, Schraml C, Martirosian P, Bezrukov I, Hetzel J, Müller M, Sauter A, Claussen CD, Pfannenberg C, Schwenzer NF
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Hybrid whole-body magnetic resonance/positron emission tomography (MR/PET) systems are a new diagnostic tool enabling the simultaneous acquisition of morphologic and multiple functional data and thus allowing for a diversified characterization of oncological diseases.The aim of this study was to investigate the image and alignment quality of MR/PET in patients with pulmonary lesions and to compare the congruency of the 2 functional measurements of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in MR imaging and 2-deoxy-[18F] fluoro-2-D-glucose (FDG) uptake in PET. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 15 patients were examined with a routine positron emission tomography/computer tomography (PET/CT) protocol and, subsequently, in a whole-body MR/PET scanner allowing for simultaneous PET and MR data acquisition. The PET and MR image quality was assessed visually using a 4-point score (1, insufficient; 4, excellent). The alignment quality of the rigidly registered PET/CT and MR/PET data sets was investigated on the basis of multiple anatomic landmarks of the lung using a scoring system from 1 (no alignment) to 4 (very good alignment). In addition, the alignment quality of the tumor lesions in PET/CT and MR/PET as well as for retrospective fusion of PET from PET/CT and MR images was assessed quantitatively and was compared between lesions strongly or less influenced by respiratory motion. The correlation of the simultaneously acquired DWI and FDG uptake in the pulmonary masses was analyzed using the minimum and mean apparent diffusion coefficient (ADCmin and ADCmean) as well as the maximum and mean standardized uptake value (SUVmax and SUVmean), respectively. In addition, the correlation of SUVmax from PET/CT data was investigated as well. On lesions 3 cm or greater, a voxelwise analysis of ADC and SUV was performed. RESULTS: The visual evaluation revealed excellent image quality of the PET images (mean [SD] score, 3.6 [0.5]) and overall good image quality of DWI (mean [SD] score of 2.5 [0.5] for ADC maps and 2.7 [0.5] for diffusion-weighted images, respectively). The alignment quality of the data sets was very good in both MR/PET and PET/CT without significant differences (overall mean [SD] score of MR/PET, 3.8 [0.4]; PET/CT 3.6 [0.5]). Also, the alignment quality of the tumor lesions showed no significant differences between PET/CT and MR/PET (mean cumulative misalignment of MR/PET, 7.7 mm; PET/CT, 7.0 mm; P = 0.705) but between both modalities and a retrospective fusion (mean cumulative misalignment, 17.1 mm; P = 0.002 and P = 0.008 for PET/CT and MR/PET, respectively). Also, the comparison of the lesions strongly or less influenced by respiratory motion showed significant differences only for the retrospective fusion (21.3 mm vs 11.5 mm, respectively; P = 0.043). The ADCmin and SUVmax as measures of the cell density and glucose metabolism showed a significant reverse correlation (r = -0.80; P = 0.0006). No significant correlation was found between ADCmean and SUVmean (r = -0.42; P = 0.1392). Also, SUVmax from the PET/CT data showed significant reverse correlation to ADCmin (r = -0.62; P = 0.019). The voxelwise analysis of 5 pulmonary lesions each showed weak but significant negative correlation between ADC and SUV. CONCLUSIONS: Examinations of pulmonary lesions in a simultaneous whole-body MR/PET system provide diagnostic image quality in both modalities. Although DWI and FDG-PET reflect different tissue properties, there may very well be an association between the measures of both methods most probably because of increased cellularity and glucose metabolism of FDG-avid pulmonary lesions. A voxelwise DWI and FDG-PET correlation might provide a more sophisticated spatial characterization of pulmonary lesions.
PMID: 23519008 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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Life-threatening Events in Respiratory Medicine: Misconnections of Invasive and Non-invasive Ventilators and Interfaces.
Pneumologie. 2013 Mar 11;
Authors: Stieglitz S, George S, Priegnitz C, Hagmeyer L, Randerath W
Abstract
Purpose: Both the parallel use of intensive care unit (ICU)-ventilators and ventilators dedicated to non-invasive ventilation (NIV), as well as the construction of some expiratory valves in single circuit breathing tubes may lead to misconnections which are potentially fatal for the patient. Methods: We demonstrate first a case of a misconnected expiratory valve in a patient with invasive home ventilation. In a second case, the mistaken connection of a non-invasive ventilator to an endotracheal tube leading to carbon dioxide (CO2)-rebreathing is demonstrated. A third case describes a patient with home non-invasive ventilation who had been delivered a non-vented mask out-of-hospital, likewise leading to CO2-rebreathing.Conclusion: Human error is the main reason for critical incidents in medicine and the most serious unintended events often involve mechanical ventilation. A regular instruction of medical staff and patients is necessary. The demonstrated misconnections are examples of latent errors "waiting to happen". To prevent these errors from being made in the future, technological solutions similar to the aviation effort to improve safety are needed.
PMID: 23479399 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]