Publications by authors named "Basrull N Bhaludin"

Background: De-escalation of axillary surgery for lymph node (LN) positive breast cancer is facilitated by marking involved nodes which, when removed with sentinel nodes constitute risk-adapted targeted axillary dissection (TAD). Whether after chemotherapy or for primary surgery, selected patients with biopsy-proven involvement of nodes may be eligible for axillary conservation. Likewise, impalpable recurrence or stage 4 patients with localised axillary disease may benefit.

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Background: The assessment of metastatic breast cancer (MBC) can be limited with routine imaging such as computed tomography (CT) especially in bone-only or bone-predominant disease. This analysis investigates the effects of the use of WBMRI in addition to the use of routine CT, bone scintigraphy (BS) and fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography with computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) on influencing systemic anti-cancer treatment (SACT) decisions in patients with known MBC.

Methods: MBC patients undergoing SACT who had WBMRI undertaken within 8 weeks of either a routine CT, BS or FDG-PET/CT were reviewed retrospectively.

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Article Synopsis
  • Invasive lobular breast carcinomas (ILC) make up around 15% of breast cancer cases and are harder to diagnose due to their unique growth and spread patterns, which include metastasis to unusual sites like peritoneum and GI tract.
  • Traditional imaging methods like CT might struggle with assessing ILC, especially when bone involvement is predominant, while whole-body MRI (WBMRI) can provide better evaluation of both bone and soft tissue disease due to its functional imaging capabilities.
  • Recent studies indicate that WBMRI can identify more metastatic sites in breast cancer, leading to changes in treatment plans, and can be especially important for non-FDG-avid ILC cases that traditional FDG-PET/CT might underestimate.
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Angiosarcomas are rare, aggressive soft tissue sarcomas originating from endothelial cells of lymphatic or vascular origin and associated with a poor prognosis. The clinical and imaging features of angiosarcomas are heterogeneous with a wide spectrum of findings involving any site of the body, but these most commonly present as cutaneous disease in the head and neck of elderly men. MRI and CT are complementary imaging techniques in assessing the extent of disease, focality and involvement of adjacent anatomical structures at the primary site of disease.

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To identify the anatomy and pathology of chest wall malformations presenting for consideration for corrective surgery or as a possible chest wall "mass", and to review the common corrective surgical procedures. Congenital chest wall deformities are caused by anomalies of chest wall growth, leading to sternal depression or protrusion, or are related to failure of normal spine or rib development. Cross-sectional imaging allows appreciation not only of the involved structures but also assessment of the degree of displacement or deformity of adjacent but otherwise normal structures and differentiation between anatomical deformity and neoplasia.

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Rationale, Aims And Objectives: This study aimed to apply the 'systems approach' to patient safety in order to identify causes for delays and errors in lung cancer diagnoses following an abnormal chest radiograph.

Methods: In the first part of this study, the systems approach to patient safety was comprehensively reviewed by three radiologists and seven patient safety experts. In the second part of this study, a retrospective review was performed of all patients referred to the lung cancer multidisciplinary team (MDT) meeting over a 1-year period.

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