Wos Açık Erişimli Yayınlar
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/10754
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Item Expert opinion on the recognition, diagnosis and management of children and adults with Fabry disease: a multidisciplinary Turkey perspective(2022) Ezgu, Fatih; Alpsoy, Erkan; Bicik Bahcebasi, Zerrin; Kasapcopur, Ozgur; Palamar, Melis; Onay, Huseyin; Ozdemir, Binnaz Handan; Topcuoglu, Mehmet Akif; Tufekcioglu, Omac; 0000-0003-3478-9292; 35236382This consensus statement by a panel of Fabry experts aimed to identify areas of consensus on conceptual, clinical and therapeutic aspects of Fabry disease (FD) and to provide guidance to healthcare providers on best practice in the management of pediatric and adult patients with FD. This consensus statement indicated the clinical heterogeneity of FD as well as a large number of pathogenic variants in the GLA gene, emphasizing a need for an individualized approach to patient care. The experts reached consensus on the critical role of a high index of suspicion in symptomatic patients and screening of certain at-risk groups to reveal timely and accurate diagnosis of FD along with an increased awareness of the treating physician about the different kinds of pathogenic variants and their clinical implications. The experts emphasized the crucial role of timely recognition of FD with minimal delay from symptom onset to definite diagnosis in better management of FD patients, given the likelihood of changing the disease's natural history, improving the patients' quality of life and the prognosis after enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) administered through a coordinated, multidisciplinary care approach. In this regard, this consensus document is expected to increase awareness among physicians about unique characteristics of FD to assist clinicians in recognizing FD with a well-established clinical suspicion consistent with pathogenic variants and gender-based heterogeneous clinical manifestations of FD and in translating this information into their clinical practice for best practice in the management of patients with FD.Item Tacrolimus intrapatient variability in BK virus nephropathy and chronic calcineurin toxicity in kidney transplantation(2021) Turgut, Didem; Sayin, Burak; Soy, Ebru Ayvazoglu; Topcu, Deniz İlhan; Ozdemir, Binnaz Handan; Haberal, Mehmet; 0000-0002-3462-7632; 0000-0002-0993-9917; 35017328; AAJ-8097-2021; AAC-5566-2019Intrapatient variability (IPV) in tacrolimus has been increasingly acknowledged as a risk factor for poor graft survival after kidney transplantation. Although past studies have mainly accounted for IPV in acute or chronic rejection states as due to underimmunosuppression, this is not yet clear. So far, tacrolimus IPV for BK virus-associated nephropathy (BKVN) and chronic calcineurin inhibitor toxicity (CNIT) has not been investigated. Here, we evaluated IPV in tacrolimus for BKVN and chronic CNIT, which are mainly considered as overimmunosuppression states. In this caseucontrol study, kidney allograft biopsies conducted between 1998 and 2018 were included, with patients grouped by biopsy results as BKVN alone group, CNIT alone group, and normal graft function (control group). IPV was estimated as mean absolute deviation. Our study groups included 25 kidney transplant recipients with BKVN alone, 91 patients with CNIT alone, and 60 patients with normal 5-year graft survival (control group). In analyses of IPV in tacrolimus six months before graft biopsy, IPV was highest in the BKVN group (P = 0.001). The BKVN group also had the highest IPV in tacrolimus at 12 months after biopsy (P = 0.001), with all pairwise comparisons statistically different between groups. At 12 months after biopsy, five patients (20%) in the BKVN group and 10 patients (10.9%) in the CNIT group had graft loss. Among other risk factors, BKVN and chronic CNIT are consequences related to high IPV. Quantification of IVP for tacrolimus in clinical practice would help to optimize kidney transplant outcomes.Item Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors: A Clinicopathologica and Immunohistochemical Study of 65 Cases(2018) Tepeoglu, Merih; Ozgun, Gonca; Tunca, Muzeyyen Zeyneb; Tezcaner, Tugan; Ozdemir, Binnaz Handan; 0000-0002-7528-3557; 29630088; X-8540-2019Objective: Hie clinical behavior of gastrointestinal stromal tumors is divergent. The aim of the present study was to define the clinicopathological features that determine the patient's outcome. Material and Method: Sixty-five gastrointestinal stromal tumors were reviewed with their histological, immunohistochemical and clinical features and compared with their clinical outcome statistically. Results: Tumors were located in the stomach (n=39, 60%), small intestine (n=22, 33.8%) and large intestine (n=4, 6.2%). Immunohistochemically, CD 117 positivity was found in 90.8%, whereas CD34, Smooth muscle actin, Desmin and S100 positivity was found in 73.3%, 61.7%, 11.7% and 28.3% of tumors respectively. All six "CD 117-negative" cases expressed DOG-1. The mean Ki-67 proliferation index was 8.69%+/- 12.76. Liver metastasis was detected in seven cases. A significant association was detected between decreased mean survival time and increased tumor size (p<0.001), large bowel localization (p-0.047), mitosis (p<0.001), the presence of necrosis (p=0.001), metastasis (p=0.033), Ki-67 proliferation index (p-0.002) and risk category (p<0.001). CD 34 positivity was mostly seen in the stomach (p-0.001), and CD 34 positive tumors had longer overall survival (92.85.+/- 5.77 months versus 67.21 +/- 13.68 months) (p=0.046). Higher Ki-67 proliferation index (6%) was also correlated with the presence of metastases (p=0.015). Conclusion: Our study indicates that in addition to well-known risk factors such as increased tumor size, high mitotic activity and metastasis; higher Ki-67 proliferation index, the presence of necrosis, and CD34 negativity also correlate with shorter survival time.