Institution
Tata Memorial Hospital
Healthcare•Mumbai, 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.
Topics: Cancer, Breast cancer, Population, Radiation therapy, Carcinoma
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It was found that baseline hemoglobin levels, total radiation dose, and age were associated with survival, regardless of HIV status, in women with well-managed HIV infection who initiated curative CRT in Botswana.
Abstract: Purpose To prospectively compare survival between human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected versus HIV-uninfected cervical cancer patients who initiated curative chemoradiation therapy (CRT) in a limited-resource setting. Methods and Materials Women with locally advanced cervical cancer with or without HIV infection initiating radical CRT in Botswana were enrolled in a prospective, observational, cohort study from July 2013 through January 2015. Results Of 182 women treated for cervical cancer during the study period, 143 women initiating curative CRT were included in the study. Eighty-five percent of the participants (122 of 143) had stage II/III cervical cancer, and 67% (96 of 143) were HIV-infected. All HIV-infected patients were receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) at the time of curative cervical cancer treatment initiation. We found no difference in toxicities between HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected women. The 2-year overall survival (OS) rates were 65% for HIV-infected women (95% confidence interval [CI] 54%-74%) and 66% for HIV-uninfected women (95% CI 49%-79%) (P = .70). Factors associated with better 2-year OS on multivariate analyses included baseline hemoglobin >10 g/dL (hazard ratio [HR] 0.37, 95% CI 0.19-0.72, P = .003), total radiation dose ≥75 Gy (HR 0.52, 95% CI 0.27-0.97, P = .04), and age Conclusions Human immunodeficiency virus status had no effect on 2-year OS or on acute toxicities in women with well-managed HIV infection who initiated curative CRT in Botswana. In our cohort, we found that baseline hemoglobin levels, total radiation dose, and age were associated with survival, regardless of HIV status.
50 citations
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TL;DR: Central obesity appears to be a key risk factor for BC irrespective of menopausal or HR status in Indian women with no history of hormone replacement therapy.
50 citations
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TL;DR: This study forms the largest documented series on cervical neuroendocrine carcinomas from the authors' country, testifying the current histopathologic classification system.
50 citations
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TL;DR: This paper presents a novel approach to Multimodality Medical Image Fusion (MMIF) used for the analysis of the lesions for the diagnostic purpose and post treatment review of NCC and shows promising and superior results when compared with the state of the art wavelet based fusion algorithms.
50 citations
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TL;DR: T cells expressing γδ receptors were isolated from the peripheral blood of oesophageal cancer patients and analyzed for their potential to lyse tumour targets in this paper, where the lysis of cancer targets was brought about via recognition of heat-shock proteins expressed on the surface of tumour cells.
Abstract: T cells expressing γδ receptors were isolated from the peripheral blood of oesophageal cancer patients and analysed for their potential to lyse tumour targets. Immunophenotyping by flow cytometry showed that the dominant population of γδ T cells expressed the Vγ9 and the Vδ2 T cell receptor, and a minor population expressed the Vδ1 receptor. Cytotoxicity assays revealed that activated γδ T cells lysed Daudi Burkitt's lymphoma and K562 cells. Lysis of autologous oesophageal tumours was higher than of allogenic tumours. Anti-hsp60 and anti-hsp70 mAb significantly inhibited the cytotoxicity of γδ T cells to both autologous and allogenic oesophageal tumours. Surface expression of hsp60 and hsp70 on oesophageal tumours and Daudi cells was demonstrated by flow cytometry. In conclusion, γδ T cells isolated from the peripheral blood of oesophageal cancer patients have the ability of kill oesophageal tumour cells. The lysis of tumour targets by the γδ T cells is brought about via recognition of heat-shock proteins expressed on the surface of tumour cells. γδ T cells isolated from the peripheral blood may have applications in adoptive immunotherapy of oesophageal cancer.
49 citations
Authors
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Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Al B. Benson | 113 | 578 | 48364 |
Keitaro Matsuo | 97 | 818 | 37349 |
Ashish K. Jha | 87 | 503 | 30020 |
Noopur Raje | 82 | 506 | 27878 |
Muthupandian Ashokkumar | 76 | 511 | 20771 |
Snehal G. Patel | 73 | 367 | 16905 |
Rainu Kaushal | 58 | 232 | 16794 |
Ajit S. Puri | 54 | 369 | 9948 |
Jasbir S. Arora | 51 | 351 | 15696 |
Sudeep Sarkar | 48 | 273 | 10087 |
Ian T. Magrath | 47 | 107 | 8084 |
Pankaj Chaturvedi | 45 | 325 | 15871 |
Pradeep Kumar Gupta | 44 | 416 | 7181 |
Shiv K. Gupta | 43 | 150 | 8911 |
Kikkeri N. Naresh | 43 | 245 | 6264 |