Arch Gynecol Obstet
April 2024
Purpose: Persistent high-risk HPV infection is associated with an elevated risk for prevalent CIN II + despite normal cytology (NILM). Our study aims to evaluate the clinical relevance of a persistent high-risk HPV infection without cytologic changes in women aged ≥ 65 and to determine the role of colposcopy for triage in these cases.
Methods: 211 patients aged ≥ 65 with persistent HPV infection and normal cytology (NILM) who presented for colposcopy at five certified centers between January 2021 and April 2022 were included in the study.
Unknown intestinal rotation anomaly poses a challenge in laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery. We present a case of a patient with intestinal non-rotation that stayed undetected throughout performing a laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. As a result, the alimentary limb was constructed in an anti-peristaltic way, and the whole gastric bypass was located far more distally than usual.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This study was designed to investigate the co-prevalence of cervical and oropharyngeal human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in patients with HPV-related high-grade disease of the uterine cervix (high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion [HSIL]).
Materials And Methods: In a prospective cohort study, women with abnormal cervical cytology admitted to our colposcopy units received HPV testing of the uterine cervix and the oropharynx via smear. From a subset of patients, oral lavage was collected to compare detection rates of HPV DNA between lavage and swab.
Background: In patients with primary vulvar cancer and bilateral sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, bilateral complete inguino-femoral lymphadenectomy (LAE) is recommended, even in cases with only unilaterally positive SLN by most guidelines. The risk of contralateral non-SLN metastasis is unclear.
Methods: All patients with primary vulvar cancer receiving an SLN dissection with radioactive tracer ± blue dye at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf between 2001 and 2013 were retrospectively evaluated.
Our aim was to identify and validate DNA-methylation markers associated with very good outcome in node negative, hormone receptor positive breast cancer patients after adjuvant endocrine therapy which might allow identifying patients who could be spared the burden of adjuvant chemotherapy. Using a methylation microarray, we analysed 117 candidate genes in hormone receptor-positive tumours from 109 breast cancer patients treated by adjuvant tamoxifen. Results were validated in an independent cohort (n=236, 5 centres).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recombinant adenoviral vectors are highly efficient for in vitro and in vivo gene delivery. They can easily be produced in large numbers, transduce a wide variety of cell types and generate high levels of transgene expression. The AdEasy system is a widely used system for generating recombinant adenoviral vectors, which are created with a minimum of enzymatic manipulations and by employing homologous recombination in E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe t(5;14)(q33-34;q11) translocation constitutes a recurrent rearrangement in acute lymphoblastic leukemia involving the T cell receptor (TCR) delta locus on chromosome 14. Breakpoint sequences of the derivative chromosome 5 were isolated by application of a ligation-mediated PCR technique using TCR delta-specific primers to amplify genomic DNA from the leukemic cells of a patient with t(5;14). Through exon trap analysis, we identified various putative exons of the chromosome 5 target gene of the translocation; compilation of sequence information of trapped exons and available expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from the GenBank database allowed us to assemble 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
November 2000
In the process of cloning genes at the breakpoint of t(5;14) (q34;q11), a recurring translocation in acute lymphoblastic leukemia, we isolated and characterized a novel gene at 5q34, and a close human homologue (66% amino acid identity) located at 8p11-12. The presence of an importin-beta N-terminal domain at their N-terminus, their size of approximately 110 kD, their nuclear localization and the identity of the homologue to a gene of a recently submitted RanGTP binding protein (RanBP16), suggest that its protein is a novel member of the importin-beta superfamily of nuclear transport receptors, therefore called RanBP17. Northern blot analysis of human tissues revealed a ubiquitous expression pattern of the RanBP16 gene and a very restricted expression pattern of the RanBP17 gene, showing high expression in testis and pancreas.
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