33 results match your criteria: "30 Hospital Boulevard[Affiliation]"

The peri-operative management of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in earlier stage disease has seen significant advances in recent years with the incorporation of immune checkpoint inhibitors and targeted therapy. However, many unanswered questions and challenges remain, including the application of clinical trial data to routine clinical practice. Recognising the unique demographic profile of Asian patients with NSCLC and heterogeneous healthcare systems, the Asian Thoracic Oncology Research Group (ATORG) convened a consensus meeting in Singapore on 26 April 2024 to discuss relevant issues spanning diagnostic testing to post-neoadjuvant treatment considerations and future directions.

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A systematic scoping review of mentoring support on professional identity formation.

BMC Med Educ

November 2024

Division of Cancer Education, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Singapore.

Article Synopsis
  • Mentoring is essential for professional identity formation (PIF), as it fosters personalized relationships and integrates program values, though its mechanisms remain unclear.
  • A systematic scoping review examined existing literature on mentoring support from 2000 to mid-2023, using rigorous methodology to analyze themes and categories.
  • Key findings highlight four domains vital to effective mentoring support: definitions and roles, personalisation, shepherding, and PIF, showcasing the importance of adapting mentoring approaches to meet individual mentee needs.
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A systematic scoping review on group non-written reflections in medical education.

BMC Med Educ

October 2024

Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, NUHS Tower Block, 1E Kent Ridge Road, Level 11, Singapore, 119228, Singapore.

Article Synopsis
  • Medical education focuses on developing Professional Identity Formation (PIF) in students, emphasizing reflective practice amid challenges like resource constraints.
  • Group non-written reflections (GNWR) involve facilitator-led discussions to foster shared reflection, potentially improving PIF in medical training.
  • A systematic scoping review identified 98 relevant studies, highlighting four key areas: the value of GNWR, its structure, models of reflective practice, and elements of communities that aid socialization.
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Article Synopsis
  • A novel nurse-led telehealth program was implemented for advanced cancer patients during the COVID-19 pandemic to monitor symptoms and provide palliative care support.
  • The study evaluated various aspects of the program including reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance, and acceptability over a period from June 2020 to October 2021.
  • Results showed a high satisfaction rate among participants, a significant decrease in symptom severity and emergency visits, and a successful adoption rate with 70% of oncologists referring patients to the program.
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Caring for terminally Ill patients: the impact on oncologists.

BMC Palliat Care

September 2024

Division of Cancer Education, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Singapore.

Background: Journeying with patients throughout their cancer trajectory and caring for them at the end of life can lead to emotional and moral distress in oncologists, negatively impacting their personal and professional identities. A better understanding of how transitions in care goals affect oncologists can shed light on the challenges faced and the support required. This study explored the impact of care transitions on oncologists' professional identity formation (PIF).

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Background: Mentoring can help shape how medical students think, feel, and act as physicians. Yet, the mechanism in which it influences this process of professional identity formation (PIF) remains poorly understood. Through the lens of the ecological systems theory, this study explores the interconnected and dynamic system of mentoring relationships and resources that support professional development and growth within the Palliative Medicine Initiative (PMI), a structured research peer mentoring program.

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Single-cell and spatial transcriptome analyses reveal tertiary lymphoid structures linked to tumour progression and immunotherapy response in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

Nat Commun

September 2024

State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Guangdong Key Laboratory of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Diagnosis and Therapy, Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Cancer, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, 510060, P. R. China.

Article Synopsis
  • Tertiary lymphoid structures are groups of immune cells that can affect how cancer turns out, but we don't completely understand how they interact with cancer cells.
  • In this study on nasopharyngeal carcinoma, researchers looked at over 343,000 cells to learn more about these interactions and identified important cell types that help fight cancer.
  • The findings suggest that certain immune cells help produce antibodies and improve cancer treatments, while others can get tired and stop working well against the cancer.
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Deciphering tumour microenvironment and elucidating the origin of cancer cells in ovarian clear cell carcinoma.

bioRxiv

August 2024

Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology (IMCB), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), 61 Biopolis Drive, Proteos, Singapore 138673, Republic of Singapore.

Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (CCC) has an East Asian preponderance. It is associated with endometriosis, a benign condition where endometrial (inner lining of the uterus) tissue is found outside the uterus and on the peritoneal surface, in the abdominal or pelvic space. CCC is relatively more resistant to conventional chemotherapy compared to other ovarian cancer subtypes and is associated with a poorer prognosis.

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PARP4 interacts with hnRNPM to regulate splicing during lung cancer progression.

Genome Med

July 2024

Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), 60 Biopolis Street, Genome, Singapore, 138672, Singapore.

Article Synopsis
  • * Unlike previous assumptions, the tumor-suppressive function of PARP4 is not linked to the vault complex, but rather involves its interaction with the splicing regulator hnRNPM.
  • * The research suggests that disruptions in splicing, particularly due to the loss of hnRNPM and PARP4, contribute to tumor formation in lung adenocarcinoma, highlighting a new mechanism in cancer biology.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores how mentorship in medical education has transitioned from a one-on-one relationship to include group and peer mentoring, highlighting its evolving and context-specific nature.
  • - A systematic review of literature from 2000 to 2023 identified 216 articles that illustrate mentoring as a complex adaptive system (CAS), with key characteristics such as community dynamics and long-term support.
  • - The conclusion stresses the need to rethink how mentorship is designed and supported in medical training, emphasizing the importance of understanding mentorship as a CAS for enhancing mentor training and support.
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Machine learning unveils an immune-related DNA methylation profile in germline DNA from breast cancer patients.

Clin Epigenetics

May 2024

Division of Cellular and Molecular Research, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Republic of Singapore.

Background: There is an unmet need for precise biomarkers for early non-invasive breast cancer detection. Here, we aimed to identify blood-based DNA methylation biomarkers that are associated with breast cancer.

Methods: DNA methylation profiling was performed for 524 Asian Chinese individuals, comprising 256 breast cancer patients and 268 age-matched healthy controls, using the Infinium MethylationEPIC array.

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Despite curative treatment and discharge from acute hospital settings, breast cancer patients often have cancer- and treatment-related morbidity which impairs them from returning to work. Hence, the role of community-based return to work rehabilitation programs is important to help these patients transition back to work. This was a retrospective cohort study involving patients with breast cancer conducted at a community-based cancer rehabilitation center.

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The impact of elective surgery postponement during COVID-19 on emergency bellwether procedures in a large tertiary centre in Singapore.

Int J Qual Health Care

March 2024

Division of Surgery & Surgical Oncology, National Cancer Centre Singapore and Singapore General Hospital, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore 168583, Singapore.

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic drove many healthcare systems worldwide to postpone elective surgery to increase healthcare capacity, manpower, and reduce infection risk to staff. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of an elective surgery postponement policy in response to the COVID-19 pandemic on surgical volumes and patient outcomes for three emergency bellwether procedures. A retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent any of the three emergency procedures [Caesarean section (CS), emergency laparotomy (EL), and open fracture (OF) fixation] between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2021 was conducted using clinical and surgical data from electronic medical records.

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Background: Differences in disease behaviour and genotypes are described in Asian and Western interstitial lung disease (ILD) cohorts. Short leukocyte telomere length (LTL) correlates with poor outcomes in Western ILD cohorts but its significance in Asian populations is unknown. We aim to characterise the burden and clinical implications of short LTL in Singaporean ILD patients.

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Background: Specialist palliative care is often provided late in the patient's disease trajectory in response to uncontrolled symptoms. Shifting from this reactionary illness-stress paradigm to a proactive health-wellness approach, the ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends) telehealth model aims to enhance the coping, stress and symptom management, self-care, and advance care planning skills of patients with advanced cancers and their caregivers. The ENABLE model has been culturally adapted to Singapore (ENABLE-SG) and pilot-tested.

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Breast cancer is a prevalent form of cancer worldwide, and the current standard screening method, mammography, often requires invasive biopsy procedures for further assessment. Recent research has explored microRNAs (miRNAs) in circulating blood as potential biomarkers for early breast cancer diagnosis. In this study, we employed a multi-modal spectroscopy approach, combining attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) and surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) to comprehensively characterize the full-spectrum fingerprints of RNA biomarkers in the blood serum of breast cancer patients.

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Enhancing self-care education amongst medical students: a systematic scoping review.

BMC Med Educ

January 2024

Division of Palliative and Supportive Care, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Singapore.

Background: Reports of emotional, existential and moral distress amongst medical students witnessing death and suffering of patients during their clinical postings have raised awareness on the need for better psycho-emotional support during medical school. Furthermore, the stress experienced by medical students stemming from the rigours of their academic curriculum underlines the need for greater awareness on mental health issues and better self-care practices across medical training. With such programmes lacking in most medical schools, we propose a systematic scoping review (SSR) to map and address our research question, "what is known about self-care education interventions amongst medical students?".

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The role of patients' stories in medicine: a systematic scoping review.

BMC Palliat Care

December 2023

Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University Singapore, Level 11 NUHS Tower Block, 1E Kent Ridge Road, Singapore, 119228, Singapore.

Background: Patients' stories provide Palliative Care physicians with a glimpse into the former's lives and their psycho-emotional, sociocultural, and contextual considerations. Yet, few physicians are trained to interpret and apply patients' stories in their practice. Inherent variability in how stories are transmitted and interpreted raises questions over their potential effects on care.

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Solitary fibrous tumor/Hemangiopericytoma (SFT/HPC) is a rare subtype of soft tissue sarcoma harboring NAB2-STAT6 gene fusions. Mechanistic studies and therapeutic development on SFT/HPC are impeded by scarcity and lack of system models. In this study, we established and characterized a novel SFT/HPC patient-derived cell line (PDC), SFT-S1, and screened for potential drug candidates that could be repurposed for the treatment of SFT/HPC.

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Radiomics in precision oncology: hype or ludum mutante.

BMC Med

November 2023

Precision Radiotherapeutics Oncology Programme, Division of Medical Sciences, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Singapore.

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Single-Cell Analysis Reveals Malignant Cells Reshape the Cellular Landscape and Foster an Immunosuppressive Microenvironment of Extranodal NK/T-Cell Lymphoma.

Adv Sci (Weinh)

December 2023

State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Cancer, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, 510060, China.

Extranodal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma (NKTCL) is an aggressive type of lymphoma associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and characterized by heterogeneous tumor behaviors. To better understand the origins of the heterogeneity, this study utilizes single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis to profile the tumor microenvironment (TME) of NKTCL at the single-cell level. Together with in vitro and in vivo models, the study identifies a subset of LMP1 malignant NK cells contributing to the tumorigenesis and development of heterogeneous malignant cells in NKTCL.

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Background: Mentoring plays a pivotal yet poorly understood role in shaping a physician's professional identity formation (PIF) or how they see, feel and act as professionals. New theories posit that mentoring nurtures PIF by functioning as a community of practice through its structured approach and its support of a socialisation process made possible by its assessment-directed personalized support. To test this theory and reshape the design, employ and support of mentoring programs, we evaluate peer-mentor experiences within the Palliative Medicine Initiative's structured research mentoring program.

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Economic Evaluations of Imaging Biomarker-Driven Companion Diagnostics for Cancer: A Systematic Review.

Appl Health Econ Health Policy

November 2023

Division of Cellular and Molecular Research, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168853, Singapore.

Introduction: There is a boom in imaging biomarker-driven companion and complementary diagnostics (CDx) for cancer, which brings opportunity for personalized medicine. Whether adoption of these technologies is likely to be cost-effective is a relevant question, and studies on this topic are emerging. Despite the growing number of economic evaluations, no review of the methods used, quality of reporting, and potential risk of bias has been done.

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Degradation of methylation signals in cryopreserved DNA.

Clin Epigenetics

September 2023

Division of Cellular and Molecular Research, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 30 Hospital Boulevard, Singapore, 168583, Singapore.

Background: Blood-based DNA methylation has shown great promise as a biomarker in a wide variety of diseases. Studies of DNA methylation in blood often utilize samples which have been cryopreserved for years or even decades. Therefore, changes in DNA methylation associated with long-term cryopreservation can introduce biases or otherwise mislead methylation analyses of cryopreserved DNA.

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