Publications by authors named "Slim Bach Hamba"

Objective: We sought to describe a large, international cohort of patients diagnosed with primary mucinous ovarian carcinoma (PMOC) across 3 tertiary medical centers to evaluate differences in patient characteristics, surgical/adjuvant treatment strategies, and oncologic outcomes.

Methods: This was a retrospective review spanning 1976-2014. All tumors were centrally reviewed by an expert gynecologic pathologist.

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Background: The present study retrospectively determined the outcomes and prognoses in stage I mucinous ovarian carcinoma according to histological type (ie, expansile or infiltrative).

Methods: A centralized pathologic review of tumors in patients treated from 1976 to 2016 for ovarian mucinous carcinoma was performed by 2 expert pathologists according to the 2014 World Health Organization classification. Only patients with stage I disease were analyzed.

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Background: No series had been reported focusing on the results of fertility-sparing surgery in stage I mucinous ovarian cancers according to histotype (infiltrative vs. expansile). Investigating such outcomes was the aim of the present study.

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According to the latest World Health Organization classification (2014), mucinous ovarian cancers should be classified histologically as being either expansile or infiltrative. Compared to other epithelial cancers, both of these mucinous patterns are diagnosed, in the main, at an early stage, although they can affect relatively young patients. The infiltrative subtype is characterized by a morphologically and clinically more aggressive disease versus the expansile form.

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The aim of this study is to determine the value of surgical staging for the two histologic types (expansile or infiltrative) of apparent stage I mucinous ovarian carcinoma. We retrospectively analyzed patients treated from 1976 and 2016 for apparent macroscopic stage I ovarian mucinous carcinoma. Extra-ovarian disease and tumors that metastasized to the ovaries were excluded.

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Background: Glioblastoma (GB) is the most common and lethal primary brain tumor in adults representing 25% of primary brain tumors in adults. The objective of our study was to report the epidemiologic, clinical and therapeutic features of GB in Tunisia.

Methods: Our retrospective study included 41 patients with histologically confirmed GB treated between 2006 and 2012 at the medical oncology departments of Abderrahmane Mami hospital in Ariana and the military hospital in Tunis.

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