3 resultados para management of patients

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Bone metastases are responsible for different clinical complications defined as skeletal-related events (SREs) such as pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, hypercalcaemia, bone marrow infiltration and severe bone pain requiring palliative radiotherapy. The general aim of these three years research period was to improve the management of patients with bone metastases through two different approaches of translational research. Firstly in vitro preclinical tests were conducted on breast cancer cells and on indirect co-colture of cancer cells and osteoclasts to evaluate bone targeted therapy singly and in combination with conventional chemotherapy. The study suggests that zoledronic acid has an antitumor activity in breast cancer cell lines. Its mechanism of action involves the decrease of RAS and RHO, as in osteoclasts. Repeated treatment enhances antitumor activity compared to non-repeated treatment. Furthermore the combination Zoledronic Acid + Cisplatin induced a high antitumoral activity in the two triple-negative lines MDA-MB-231 and BRC-230. The p21, pMAPK and m-TOR pathways were regulated by this combined treatment, particularly at lower Cisplatin doses. A co-colture system to test the activity of bone-targeted molecules on monocytes-breast conditioned by breast cancer cells was also developed. Another important criticism of the treatment of breast cancer patients, is the selection of patients who will benefit of bone targeted therapy in the adjuvant setting. A retrospective case-control study on breast cancer patients to find new predictive markers of bone metastases in the primary tumors was performed. Eight markers were evaluated and TFF1 and CXCR4 were found to discriminate between patients with relapse to bone respect to patients with no evidence of disease. In particular TFF1 was the most accurate marker reaching a sensitivity of 63% and a specificity of 79%. This marker could be a useful tool for clinicians to select patients who could benefit for bone targeted therapy in adjuvant setting.

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Background and Aims: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) represents the second leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Protein induced by vitamin K absence (PIVKA-II) has been proposed as potential screening biomarker for HCC.This study has been designed to evaluate the role of PIVKA-II as diagnostic HCC marker, through the comparison between PIVKA-II and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) serum levels on HCC patients and the two control groupsof patients with liver disease and without HCC. Methods: In an Italian prospective cohort, PIVKA-II levels were assessed on serum samplesby an automated chemiluminescent immunoassay (Abbott ARCHITECT). The study population included 65 patients with HCC (both “de novo” and recurrent), 111 with liver cirrhosis (LC) and 111 with chronic hepatitis C (CHC). Results: PIVKA-II levels were increased in patients with HCC (median 63.75, range: 12-2675 mAU/mL) compared to LC (median value: 30.95, range: 11.70–1251mAU / mL, Mann Whitney test p < 0.0001) and CHC (median value: 24.89, range: 12.98-67.68mAU / mL, p < 0.0001).The area under curve (AUC) for PIVKA-II was 0.817 (95% Confidence Interval(CI), 0.752-0.881). At the optimal threshold of 37 mAU / mL, identified by the Youden Index, the sensitivity and specificity were 79% and 76%, respectively. PIVKA-II was a better biomarker than AFP for the diagnosis of HCC, since the AUC for AFP was 0.670 (95% CI 0.585-0.754, p<0.0001) and at the best cutoff of 16.4 ng / mL AFP yielded 98% specificity but only 34% sensitivity. Conclusions:These initial data suggest the potential utility of this tool in the diagnosis of HCC.PIVKA-II alone or in combination may help to an early diagnosis of HCC and a significant optimization of patient management.

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Changing or creating an organisation means creating a new process. Each process involves many risks that need to be identified and managed. The main risks considered here are procedural and legal risks. The former are related to the risks of errors that may occur during processes, while the latter are related to the compliance of processes with regulations. Managing the risks implies proposing changes to the processes that allow the desired result: an optimised process. In order to manage a company and optimise it in the best possible way, not only should the organisational aspect, risk management and legal compliance be taken into account, but it is important that they are all analysed simultaneously with the aim of finding the right balance that satisfies them all. This is the aim of this thesis, to provide methods and tools to balance these three characteristics, and to enable this type of optimisation, ICT support is used. This work isn’t a thesis in computer science or law, but rather an interdisciplinary thesis. Most of the work done so far is vertical and in a specific domain. The particularity and aim of this thesis is not to carry out an in-depth analysis of a particular aspect, but rather to combine several important aspects, normally analysed separately, which however have an impact and influence each other. In order to carry out this kind of interdisciplinary analysis, the knowledge base of both areas was involved and the combination and collaboration of different experts in the various fields was necessary. Although the methodology described is generic and can be applied to all sectors, the case study considered is a new type of healthcare service that allows patients in acute disease to be hospitalised to their home. This provide the possibility to perform experiments using real hospital database.