We have observed that an early increase in the CD4+/CD8+ ratio of metastatic melanoma patients during chemoimmunotherapy is the most favourable independent prognostic factor. In this study, 87 patients with metastatic melanoma were monitored for peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets (CD4+ and CD8+) before and during chemoimmunotherapy (dacarbazine, vinblastine, lomustine and bleomycin or dacarbazine alone plus interferon-alpha) to confirm our previous observation. Blood samples were systematically obtained from patients who received either of these chemoimmunotherapies. The frequencies of peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets were monitored by flow cytometry using monoclonal antibodies OKT4 (CD4+, T-helper cells) and OKT8 (CD8+, T-suppressor cells). The overall response rate was 46.5%, and the median overall survival was 9.3 months. Patients with pre-treatment CD4+ levels above the mean level, who later responded to therapy, had a median survival of 28.1 months vs. 10.2 months for responders with low pre-treatment CD4+ levels (P=0.053, log-rank test). Responders with decreasing CD8+ levels had a median survival of 27.8 months vs. 10.8 months for responders with increasing CD8+ levels (P=0.04, log-rank test). Similarly, responding patients with an increasing CD4+/CD8+ ratio had a median survival of 28.1 months vs. 10.5 months for those with decreasing ratios (P=0.002, log-rank test). Non-responders showed no difference in median survival irrespective of low or high pre-treatment CD4+ lymphocytes, increasing or decreasing CD8+ levels, or increasing or decreasing CD4+/CD8+ ratios. This follow-up study confirms that the monitoring of CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes may provide important predictive and prognostic information in metastatic melanoma patients receiving chemoimmunotherapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00008390-200412000-00009 | DOI Listing |
Ann Surg Oncol
January 2025
Department of Otolaryngology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Background: Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is a highly lethal disease, often diagnosed with advanced locoregional and distant metastases, resulting in a median survival of just 3-5 months. This study determines the stratified effectiveness of baseline treatments in all combinations, enabling precise prognoses prediction and establishing benchmarks for advanced therapeutic options.
Methods: The study extracted a cohort of pathologically confirmed ATC patients from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program.
Background: Urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) is a biomarker for the early diagnosis of AKI.
Objectives: To evaluate uNGAL in dogs with non-associative immune mediated hemolytic anemia (IMHA) and to evaluate whether uNGAL correlates with disease severity markers, negative prognostic indicators and outcome.
Animals: Twenty-two dogs with non-associative IMHA and 14 healthy dogs.
Infection
January 2025
Department of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Hospital St. Georg, Leipzig, Germany.
Purpose: To analyze the associations between adherence to quality indicators (QIs) in the treatment of bloodstream infections caused by methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus (S.) aureus (MSSA) and in-hospital mortality.
Methods: A retrospective observational study was conducted in patients admitted between 2019 and 2023 to Hospital St.
Int Urol Nephrol
January 2025
Department of Urology and Urosurgery, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), University of Heidelberg, Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3, 68167, Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Purpose: To identify prognostic factors for overall survival (OS) and develop a prognostic score in patients receiving docetaxel in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
Methods: Retrospective analysis was conducted on mCRPC patients treated with docetaxel at a German tertiary center between March 2010 and November 2023. Prognostic clinical and laboratory factors were analyzed using uni- and multivariable logistic regression.
Surg Today
January 2025
Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, The Cancer Institute Hospital of Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research, 3-8-31, Ariake, Koto-Ku, Tokyo, 135-8550, Japan.
Purpose: To investigate the effect of preoperative prealbumin levels on long-term survival outcomes after gastrectomy in patients with gastric cancer (GC) dichotomized based on age.
Methods: This retrospective cohort study included consecutive patients who underwent radical gastrectomy for primary stage I-III GC between May 2006 and March 2017. Patients were allocated to groups based on age (≥ 70 or < 70 years) and subgroups based on prealbumin levels (high, ≥ 22 mg/dL; moderate, 15-22 mg/dL; or low, < 15 mg/dL), and multivariate Cox regression was used for survival analyses.
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