Publications by authors named "M Jentschke"

While cervical cancer is associated with a persistent human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, the progression to cancer is influenced by genomic risk factors that have remained largely obscure. Pathogenic variants in genes of the homology-directed repair (HDR) or mismatch repair (MMR) are known to predispose to diverse tumour entities including breast and ovarian cancer (HDR) or colon and endometrial cancer (MMR). We here investigate the spectrum of HDR and MMR germline variants in cervical cancer, with particular focus on the HPV status and histological subgroups.

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Purpose: Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide. A successful screening concept for cervical cancer reduces the incidence and mortality of cervical cancer. Quality indicators (QIs) derived from the screening guidelines for cervical cancer and used by the certified dysplasia units and dysplasia consultancies are evaluated in this paper.

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Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in females. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have proposed cervical cancer susceptibility variants at the HLA locus on chromosome 6p21. To corroborate these findings and investigate their functional impact in cervical tissues and cell lines, we genotyped nine variants from cervical cancer GWASs (rs17190106, rs535777, rs1056429, rs2763979, rs143954678, rs113937848, rs3117027, rs3130214, and rs9477610) in a German hospital-based series of 1122 invasive cervical cancers, 1408 dysplasias, and 1196 healthy controls.

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Artificial intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing medical workflows, with self-learning systems like ChatGPT showing promise in therapy recommendations. Our study evaluated ChatGPT's performance in suggesting treatments for 30 breast cancer cases. AI's role in healthcare is expanding, particularly with tools like ChatGPT becoming accessible.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study addresses the lack of a protocol for classifying patients with persistent HPV and cervical canal stenosis, highlighting significant underdiagnosis in cytology and colposcopy results, especially with a type 3 transformation zone.* ! -
  • A retrospective analysis of 1,021 conizations at a hospital in Germany found that 8.7% were diagnostic excisions, revealing high-grade abnormalities in over half of the patients studied.* ! -
  • The findings underscore the importance of diagnostic conization in patients with cervical stenosis and HPV issues, as it can help identify serious conditions like high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and early-stage cervical carcinoma.* !
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