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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: IORT has been used in a multitude of roles across these sites, for dose escalation (retroperitoneal sarcoma), EBRT dose de-escalation (paediatric tumours), as sole radiation modality (early breast cancers) and as a re-irradiation modalities (recurrent rectal and gynaecological cancers).
Abstract: Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) is a technique that involves precise delivery of a large dose of ionising radiation to the tumour or tumour bed during surgery. Direct visualisation of the tumour bed and ability to space out the normal tissues from the tumour bed allows maximisation of the dose to the tumour while minimising the dose to normal tissues. This results in an improved therapeutic ratio with IORT. Although it was introduced in the 1960s, it has seen a resurgence of popularity with the introduction of self-shielding mobile linear accelerators and low-kV IORT devices, which by eliminating the logistical issues of transport of the patient during surgery for radiotherapy or building a shielded operating room, has enabled its wider use in the community. Electrons, low-kV X-rays and HDR brachytherapy are all different methods of IORT in current clinical use. Each method has its own unique set of advantages and disadvantages, its own set of indications where one may be better suited than the other, and each requires a specific kind of expertise. IORT has demonstrated its efficacy in a wide variety of intra-abdominal tumours, recurrent colorectal cancers, recurrent gynaecological cancers, and soft-tissue tumours. Recently, it has emerged as an attractive treatment option for selected, early-stage breast cancer, owing to the ability to complete the entire course of radiotherapy during surgery. IORT has been used in a multitude of roles across these sites, for dose escalation (retroperitoneal sarcoma), EBRT dose de-escalation (paediatric tumours), as sole radiation modality (early breast cancers) and as a re-irradiation modality (recurrent rectal and gynaecological cancers). This article aims to provide a review of the rationale, techniques, and outcomes for IORT across different sites relevant to current clinical practice.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is significant impairment of objective swallowing function in all domains following CRT, with residue and aspiration domains being affected most significantly.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to objectively assess swallowing function and factors impacting it after curative intent definitive (chemo)radiotherapy (CRT) for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Swallowing function was studied in a cohort of 47 patients with locoregionally advanced (T1–4, N0–3) HNSCC treated with definitive CRT. Objective assessment of swallowing function was done using modified barium swallow (MBS) at baseline (pre-CRT) and subsequent follow-ups. Scoring of MBS was done using penetration–aspiration scale (PAS). Abnormal swallowing was defined in terms of incidence and severity of penetration–aspiration, pharyngeal residue, postural change, and regurgitation. Aspiration, residual, postural change, and regurgitation were present on baseline pre-CRT assessment in 9 (19%), 11 (23%), 10 (21%), and 5 (10%) patients that increased to 11 (29%), 11 (29%), 12 (32%), and 10 (26%) patients, respectively, at 6-month post-CRT evaluation. The proportion of patients with high PAS scores (3-7) increased from 27% at baseline to 37% at 6-month post-CRT evaluation. Among patients (n = 34) with low PAS scores (≤2) at baseline, additional impairment of swallowing function was seen in 53 and 46% at 2- and 6-month assessment, respectively. Residue (44%) and aspiration (18%) domains were impaired in a higher proportion of patients after CRT. Thin and thick barium had higher aspiration and residue function impairment, respectively. Patients with pre-CRT poor subjective swallowing function (P = 0.004), hypopharyngeal primary (P = 0.05), and large tumor volume (P = 0.05) had significantly worse objective swallowing function at baseline as demonstrated by pretreatment PAS scores. This study provides useful information regarding patterns of objective swallowing dysfunction in patients treated with definitive (chemo)radiotherapy. There is significant impairment of objective swallowing function in all domains following CRT, with residue and aspiration domains being affected most significantly.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: FNAC is the first line of investigation in most nontoxic nodular goiters and often the only procedure necessary to obtain an accurate diagnosis, however, it is recommended only as an adjunct to clinical judgment and is not intended to replace it.
Abstract: The diagnostic accuracy of fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) was evaluated in thyroid nodules in 100 consecutive cases, who subsequently underwent thyroidectomy between the years 1989–1991. FNAC as a diagnostic test for thyroid nodules demonstrated an accuracy of 90.9%, a sensitivity of 76.5%, a specificity of 95.9% with a false positivity of 2%, false negativity of 4%, positive and negative predictive values of 86.7% and 92.2%, respectively. A correct classification of the carcinoma type on the basis of FNAC was possible only in 69% patients. As a result, FNAC is the first line of investigation in most nontoxic nodular goiters and often the only procedure necessary to obtain an accurate diagnosis. However, it is recommended only as an adjunct to clinical judgment and is not intended to replace it. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

67 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In the study, cigarette smoking and bidi smoking, as well as alcohol consumption, demonstrated dose-response relationships with lung cancer risk, and among the dietary items, only red-meat consumption showed 2.2-fold significant excess risk; while coffee showed a 2-fold excess risk for lung cancer.
Abstract: In the year 2010, it is estimated that nearly 1.35 million new cases and 1.18 million deaths with lung cancer occurred. In India, among males, lung cancer rates vary across the country which has encouraged us to conduct a case-control study to study the risk factors. The present unmatched hospital-based case-control study conducted at Tata Memorial Hospital included subjects registered between the years 1997-99. There were 408 lung 'cancer cases' and 1383 'normal controls'. Data on age, tobacco habits, occupational history, dietary factors, tea, coffee were collected by the social investigators. Univariate and regression analysis were applied for obtaining the odds ratio for risk factors. In the study, cigarette smoking (OR=5.2) and bidi smoking (OR=8.3), as well as alcohol consumption (OR=1.8), demonstrated dose-response relationships with lung cancer risk. Among the dietary items, only red-meat consumption showed 2.2-fold significant excess risk. Consumption of milk showed a 60% reduction in risk; while coffee showed a 2-fold excess risk for lung cancer. In addition, exposure to use of pesticides showed a 2.5-fold significant excess risk for lung cancer.

67 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Oct 2000-BMJ
TL;DR: There is sufficient circumstantial evidence to suggest that clinical breast examination is as effective as mammography in reducing mortality from breast cancer and that the time has come to compare these two screening methods directly in a randomised trial.
Abstract: Breast cancer screening and mammography have almost become synonymous in the public perception, yet this should not necessarily be the case. Ideally, a screening tool for breast cancer would reduce mortality from breast cancer while having a low false alarm rate and being relatively cheap. Screening should not be at the expense of the symptomatic services nor inappropriately divert scarce resources away from equally deserving areas of the NHS that are less politically sensitive.1 An ideal screening test would be simple, inexpensive, and effective. Of the three modalities of breast cancer screening—breast self examination, clinical breast examination, and mammography—breast self examination fulfils the first two criteria, but early results of two randomised trials conducted in Russia and China suggest that it would not be effective in reducing mortality from breast cancer. 2 3 Clinical breast examination is also relatively simple and inexpensive, but its effectiveness in reducing mortality from breast cancer has not been directly tested in a randomised trial. Mammography is complex, expensive, and only partially effective. We believe that there is sufficient circumstantial evidence to suggest that clinical breast examination is as effective as mammography in reducing mortality from breast cancer and that the time has come to compare these two screening methods directly in a randomised trial. #### Summary points The goal of breast screening is to prevent death and not simply to detect cancers by mammography Mammography does detect some cancers “early,” but many of these are not potentially lethal and their detection causes needless anxiety Clinical breast examination is more likely to detect cancers that are potentially lethal Results of the second Canadian national breast screening study suggest that mammographic detection of cancers that are not palpable does not affect mortality New GMC guidelines on informed consent state that women in the NHS breast screening programme should …

67 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