Institution
Hebron University
Education•Hebron, Palestinian Territory•
About: Hebron University is a education organization based out in Hebron, Palestinian Territory. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 2714 authors who have published 4180 publications receiving 163736 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Sepsis incidence has risen in recent years, whereas mortality has fallen, and these findings confirm reports for other parts of the world, in the context of scarce administrative data on sepsis in Europe.
Abstract: Up-to-date identification of local trends in sepsis incidence and outcomes is of considerable public health importance. The aim of our study was to estimate annual incidence rates and in-hospital mortality trends for hospitalized patients with sepsis in a European setting, while avoiding selection bias in relation to different complexity hospitals. A large retrospective analysis of a 5-year period (2008–2012) was conducted of hospital discharge records obtained from the Catalan Health System (CatSalut) Minimum Basic Data Set for Acute-Care Hospitals (a mandatory population-based register of admissions to all public and private acute-care hospitals in Catalonia). Patients hospitalized with sepsis were detected on the basis of ICD-9-CM codes used to identify acute organ dysfunction and infectious processes. Of 4,761,726 discharges from all acute-care hospitals in Catalonia, 82,300 cases (1.72%) had sepsis diagnoses. Annual incidence was 212.7 per 100,000 inhabitants/year, rising from 167.2 in 2008 to 261.8 in 2012. Length of hospital stay fell from 18.4 to 15.3 days (p < .00001), representing a relative reduction of 17%. Hospital mortality fell from 23.7 to 19.7% (p < .0001), representing a relative reduction of 16.9%. These differences were confirmed in the multivariate analysis (adjusted for age group, sex, comorbidities, ICU admission, emergency admission, organ dysfunction, number of organ failures, sepsis source and bacteraemia). Sepsis incidence has risen in recent years, whereas mortality has fallen. Our findings confirm reports for other parts of the world, in the context of scarce administrative data on sepsis in Europe.
56 citations
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TL;DR: Patients typically present with shortness of breath due to pleural effusion or chest pain in a more advanced stage, and the possible contribution of serum mesothelin-related proteins and osteopontin as useful markers to support the diagnosis of mesothelioma is suggested.
56 citations
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TL;DR: It is reported that the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) recapitulates the genomic alterations of the tumour and facilitates subgrouping and risk stratification, providing valuable information about diagnosis and prognosis.
Abstract: The molecular characterisation of medulloblastoma, the most common paediatric brain tumour, is crucial for the correct management and treatment of this heterogenous disease. However, insufficient tissue sample, the presence of tumour heterogeneity, or disseminated disease can challenge its diagnosis and monitoring. Here, we report that the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) recapitulates the genomic alterations of the tumour and facilitates subgrouping and risk stratification, providing valuable information about diagnosis and prognosis. CSF ctDNA also characterises the intra-tumour genomic heterogeneity identifying small subclones. ctDNA is abundant in the CSF but barely present in plasma and longitudinal analysis of CSF ctDNA allows the study of minimal residual disease, genomic evolution and the characterisation of tumours at recurrence. Ultimately, CSF ctDNA analysis could facilitate the clinical management of medulloblastoma patients and help the design of tailored therapeutic strategies, increasing treatment efficacy while reducing excessive treatment to prevent long-term secondary effects.
56 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed TOPARP-B phase II clinical trial samples, evaluating whole-exome and low-pass whole-genome sequencing and IHC and IF assays evaluating ATM and RAD51 foci (testing homologous recombination repair function).
Abstract: PARP inhibitors are approved for treating advanced prostate cancers (APC) with various defective DNA repair genes; however, further studies to clinically qualify predictive biomarkers are warranted. Herein we analyzed TOPARP-B phase II clinical trial samples, evaluating whole-exome and low-pass whole-genome sequencing and IHC and IF assays evaluating ATM and RAD51 foci (testing homologous recombination repair function). BRCA1/2 germline and somatic pathogenic mutations associated with similar benefit from olaparib; greater benefit was observed with homozygous BRCA2 deletion. Biallelic, but not monoallelic, PALB2 deleterious alterations were associated with clinical benefit. In the ATM cohort, loss of ATM protein by IHC was associated with a better outcome. RAD51 foci loss identified tumors with biallelic BRCA and PALB2 alterations while most ATM- and CDK12-altered APCs had higher RAD51 foci levels. Overall, APCs with homozygous BRCA2 deletion are exceptional responders; PALB2 biallelic loss and loss of ATM IHC expression associated with clinical benefit. Significance: Not all APCs with DNA repair defects derive similar benefit from PARP inhibition. Most benefit was seen among patients with BRCA2 homozygous deletions, biallelic loss of PALB2, and loss of ATM protein. Loss of RAD51 foci, evaluating homologous recombination repair function, was found primarily in tumors with biallelic BRCA1/2 and PALB2 alterations. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2659
56 citations
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University of Duisburg-Essen1, Marche Polytechnic University2, Erasmus University Rotterdam3, Sarah Cannon Research Institute4, Hebron University5, Autonomous University of Barcelona6, Meir Medical Center7, University of Ulsan8, Rambam Health Care Campus9, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center10, Hannover Medical School11, Center for Global Development12, Novartis13, Seoul National University Hospital14
TL;DR: MET GCN ≥6 and/or METex14 are suited to predict clinical activity of capmatinib in patients with NSCLC (NCT01324479), and key secondary objective was to explore antitumor activity.
56 citations
Authors
Showing all 2723 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
José Baselga | 156 | 707 | 122498 |
M. I. Martínez | 134 | 1251 | 79885 |
Josep Tabernero | 111 | 803 | 68982 |
Jordi Rello | 103 | 694 | 35994 |
Xavier Montalban | 95 | 762 | 52842 |
James M. Downey | 91 | 381 | 29506 |
Enriqueta Felip | 83 | 622 | 53364 |
Joaquim Bellmunt | 82 | 660 | 41472 |
Joan Montaner | 80 | 489 | 22413 |
Marc Miravitlles | 76 | 651 | 25671 |
David H. Salat | 75 | 241 | 36779 |
Eduard Gratacós | 75 | 531 | 20178 |
Alex Rovira | 74 | 356 | 19586 |
Ramon Bataller | 72 | 283 | 19316 |
Maria Buti | 71 | 493 | 26596 |