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Institution

Tata Memorial Hospital

HealthcareMumbai, India
About: Tata Memorial Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Mumbai, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cancer & Breast cancer. The organization has 3187 authors who have published 4636 publications receiving 109143 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The current review discusses issues like surgical excision, stereotactic radiotherapy, adjuvant radiation, radiosensitization and chemotherapy, and a brief discussion of the recent evidence for the use of 'HER-1/ HER-2'-targeted therapy.
Abstract: Brain metastases are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with breast cancer. HER-2 positivity is an increasingly recognized risk factor for the development of brain metastases. Although considerable progress has been made in the treatment of this complication, supportive measures like steroids, anti-seizure medication and whole-brain radiation remain the cornerstones of management in the majority of patients. The current review discusses the above and other issues like surgical excision, stereotactic radiotherapy, adjuvant radiation, radiosensitization and chemotherapy. A brief discussion of the recent evidence for the use of 'HER-1/ HER-2'-targeted therapy is also present.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive data review of Indian data will provide a basis for designing trials relevant to the population and planning health care.
Abstract: The Incidence of breast cancer has been steadily increasing in the last two decades, more so in urban areas of the sub-continent. Cancer ceters across the country have large numbers of patients being treated with multiple publications in this field. Inspite of paucity of prospective data and randomised clinical trials from India, there are large number of retrospective publications on various aspects of the disease including pathology, radiology, surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, palliative care and alternatitive treatment modalities. These published data provide an insight into the trends of breast cancer in the country and this comprehensive data review of Indian data will provide a basis for designing trials relevant to our population and planning health care.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fibular centralisation is a durable reconstruction for defects of the tibial diaphysis and distal metaphysis with an acceptable functional outcome and stable osteosynthesis is the key to successful union.
Abstract: We evaluated the results of fibular centralisation as a stand alone technique to reconstruct defects that occurred after resection of tumours involving the tibial diaphysis and distal metaphysis. Between January 2003 and December 2006, 15 patients underwent excision of tumours of the tibial diaphysis or distal metaphysis and reconstruction by fibular centralisation. Their mean age was 17 years (7 to 40). Two patients were excluded; one died from the complications of chemotherapy and a second needed a below-knee amputation for a recurrent giant-cell tumour. A total of 13 patients were reviewed after a mean follow-up of 29 months (16 to 48). Only 16 of 26 host graft junctions united primarily. Ten junctions in ten patients needed one or more further procedure before union was achieved. At final follow-up 12 of the 13 patients had fully united grafts; 11 walked without aids. The mean time to union at the junctions that united was 12 months (3 to 36). The mean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society Score was 24.7 (16 to 30). Fibular centralisation is a durable reconstruction for defects of the tibial diaphysis and distal metaphysis with an acceptable functional outcome. Stable osteosynthesis is the key to successful union. Additional bone grafting is recommended for patients who need postoperative radiotherapy.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most important predictor of disease recurrence is lymph node metastases, and in patients who undergo curative radical re-resection for incidental gallbladder cancer, recurrent disease is more likely to occur at distant sites.
Abstract: Background Better appreciation of the course and factors that influence incidental gallbladder cancer is needed to develop treatment strategies aimed at improved outcomes. The purpose of this study was to determine pattern of disease recurrence and influencing factors in patients undergoing radical re-resection for incidental gallbladder cancer.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Jul 2019-Cancers
TL;DR: AR status shows population-specific patterns of association with patients’ overall survival after controlling for age, grade, population, and chemotherapy, and is found to be a marker of good prognosis in US and Nigerian cohorts, a marker in Norway, Ireland and Indian cohorts, and neutral in UK cohort.
Abstract: Background: The androgen receptor (AR) has emerged as a potential therapeutic target for AR-positive triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). However, conflicting reports regarding AR’s prognostic role in TNBC are putting its usefulness in question. Some studies conclude that AR positivity indicates a good prognosis in TNBC, whereas others suggest the opposite, and some show that AR status has no significant bearing on the patients’ prognosis. Methods: We evaluated the prognostic value of AR in resected primary tumors from TNBC patients from six international cohorts {US (n = 420), UK (n = 239), Norway (n = 104), Ireland (n = 222), Nigeria (n = 180), and India (n = 242); total n = 1407}. All TNBC samples were stained with the same anti-AR antibody using the same immunohistochemistry protocol, and samples with ≥1% of AR-positive nuclei were deemed AR-positive TNBCs. Results: AR status shows population-specific patterns of association with patients’ overall survival after controlling for age, grade, population, and chemotherapy. We found AR-positive status to be a marker of good prognosis in US and Nigerian cohorts, a marker of poor prognosis in Norway, Ireland and Indian cohorts, and neutral in UK cohort. Conclusion: AR status, on its own, is not a reliable prognostic marker. More research to investigate molecular subtype composition among the different cohorts is warranted.

40 citations


Authors

Showing all 3213 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Al B. Benson11357848364
Keitaro Matsuo9781837349
Ashish K. Jha8750330020
Noopur Raje8250627878
Muthupandian Ashokkumar7651120771
Snehal G. Patel7336716905
Rainu Kaushal5823216794
Ajit S. Puri543699948
Jasbir S. Arora5135115696
Sudeep Sarkar4827310087
Ian T. Magrath471078084
Pankaj Chaturvedi4532515871
Pradeep Kumar Gupta444167181
Shiv K. Gupta431508911
Kikkeri N. Naresh432456264
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20235
202232
2021223
2020244
2019206
2018239