Publications by authors named "M Adejolu"

Aim: To evaluate the incidence of pseudoprogression in patients with metastatic or inoperable uterine leiomyosarcoma (LMS) treated with first-line single-agent doxorubicin.

Methods: The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust Sarcoma Unit database was searched to identify all patients with metastatic or inoperable LMS treated with first-line doxorubicin from January 2006 to January 2022. Patients with available computed tomography scans performed at baseline and during doxorubicin therapy were included.

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Medical imaging during pregnancy may be necessary to diagnose conditions that affect the outcome of the mother and fetus. Diagnosis and staging of cancer in pregnant women can be particularly challenging due to fear of inherent risk to the fetus, lack of standardized imaging protocols, and ethical challenges posed while choosing the best imaging option. Ultrasound and MRI, due to lack of ionizing radiation, are preferred over CT and nuclear imaging.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pregnancy involves significant fetal growth and development, but can present challenges with benign conditions that may appear cancerous during evaluations.
  • Detailed medical history, physical exams, ultrasounds, and non-contrast MRIs are essential for differentiating between benign and malignant conditions, with postpartum imaging often necessary.
  • This review aims to educate abdominal radiologists on recognizing benign pathologies that mimic cancer during pregnancy to improve patient care and minimize unnecessary treatments.
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Detection, characterization, staging, and response assessment are key steps in the imaging pathway of ovarian cancer. The most common type, high grade serous ovarian cancer, often presents late, so that accurate disease staging and response assessment are required through imaging in order to improve patient management. Currently, computerized tomography (CT) is the most common method for these tasks, but due to its poor soft-tissue contrast, it is unable to quantify early response within lesions before shrinkage is observed by size criteria.

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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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