Searched for: school:LISOM
Management of glioblastoma intramedullary spinal cord metastasis with advanced intraoperative techniques: a case series and systematic review [Case Report]
Palla, Adhith; Perdikis, Blake; Goff, Nicolas K; Khan, Hammad; Grin, Eric A; Kurland, David B; Belakhoua, Sarra; Wiggan, Daniel D; Alber, Daniel; Snuderl, Matija; Laufer, Ilya; Harter, David; Orringer, Daniel; Lau, Darryl
BACKGROUND:Glioblastoma intramedullary spinal cord metastasis (GISCM) is a rare sequela of high-grade astrocytoma and glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Discrete intramedullary spinal cord metastases are less common than spinal leptomeningeal spread and may follow a more indolent course. Once identified as GISCM, palliative maximal safe resection of the tumor may be considered to alleviate neurological symptoms. Reports describing the surgical management of these rare lesions, including the use of emerging technologies that may aid in maximal safe resection, are sparse. A further understanding is also required regarding the course of disease and factors contributing to mortality in GISCM. METHODS:We reviewed the intraoperative management and clinical course of three patients treated for GISCM at our institution between 2015 and 2024. We additionally conducted a PRISMA-guided systematic literature review of PubMed Central, MEDLINE, and Bookshelf databases through May 26th, 2025, including original patient reports of GISCM from cranial astrocytoma or GBM. The disease course, management strategies, and causes of mortality in previously reported cases were analyzed. RESULTS:Our institutional cohort had a mean time to spinal metastasis of 26.2 months from diagnosis of cranial disease (range 17.5-40.5 months), with a mean survival of 9.2 months following maximal safe resection of extramedullary components (range 7-12 months). In two cases, intraoperative Stimulated Raman Histology (SRH) was employed to facilitate the rapid identification of metastatic GBM, thereby influencing surgical strategy. In one case, 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) was used to differentiate between tumor and spinal cord parenchyma, facilitating maximal safe debulking without neurological injury. Literature review identified 38 prior reported cases of GISCM, with a median time to spinal diagnosis of 11.0 months and a median survival of 3.5 months thereafter. The cause of death in the review cohort often involved multiple factors, and when analyzed for contributing factors to death, 38.7% involved cranial progression, 38.7% involved progression of spinal disease, and 29.0% involved medical complications. Gait ataxia at presentation was associated with shorter survival in review patients, potentially reflecting advanced disease with extramedullary cord compression. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:GISCM represents an entity distinct from leptomeningeal disease and may be managed in conjunction with recurrent cranial disease. Surgical debulking is a technically feasible strategy that can be safely facilitated using tools employed in the management of intracranial GBM, facilitating maximal safe resection without compromising survival.
PMID: 41734534
ISSN: 1532-2653
CID: 6007982
Effect of posterior rectus sheath closure on outcomes of enhanced total extraperitoneal ventral hernia repair
Halpern, Daniel; Panahi, Armon; Cordero, Katherine; Pan, Jennifer; Pacheco, Tulio Brasiliero Silva; Joutovsky, Boris; Halpern, David
PMID: 41790287
ISSN: 1248-9204
CID: 6009272
Systematic Review and Meta Analysis of Allergic Contact Dermatitis from 2-Octyl Cyanoacrylate Adhesives
Rouhani, Daniel S; Rosenbloom, Ashton; Zeng, Steven; Sun, Alexander; Seradj, Saba H; Moshrefi, Chloe; Khoo, Kimberly; Mofid, M Mark
BACKGROUND:2-octyl cyanoacrylate (2-OCA) topical skin adhesives are widely used for surgical wound closure but are increasingly associated with allergic contact dermatitis (ACD). We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to define the incidence, clinical features, and risk factors for 2-OCA-associated ACD. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:A PRISMA systematic review of PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science (2008-2025) identified studies reporting cutaneous hypersensitivity to 2-OCA in human wound closure. Randomized, observational, and case-based reports were included. Risk of bias was assessed using ROBINS-I and RoB 2. Incidence from analytic cohorts was pooled using a random-effects model with prespecified subgroup analyses by surgical specialty. RESULTS:Seventy-four studies comprising 26,330 exposed patients were included; 20 analytic cohorts (25,442 patients) contributed to meta-analysis. The pooled ACD incidence was 4% (95% CI 3-5%) with substantial heterogeneity (I²=94.5%; prediction interval 0-12%). Incidence was 4% in orthopedic cohorts and 8% in plastic surgery cohorts, with lower rates in dermatology and obstetrics/gynecology (p=0.015 for subgroup differences). Re-exposure markedly increased risk, with reaction rates rising from 1-3% after initial exposure to >20% in staged or repeat procedures in several cohorts. Prior adhesive/contact allergy and cosmetic acrylate exposure were also strong risk factors. Diagnosis was primarily clinical, with selective patch testing. Management typically involved adhesive removal and topical corticosteroids; systemic therapy was reserved for severe cases. CONCLUSIONS:ACD to 2-OCA is a clinically meaningful and likely under-recognized complication of surgical wound closure. Re-exposure is strongly associated with increased postoperative reaction rates, supporting preoperative risk assessment and caution in repeat adhesive use.
PMID: 41784277
ISSN: 1879-1190
CID: 6008992
Evaluating tocilizumab in ischemic stroke: Findings from the SPAN multicenter trial
Chauhan, Anjali; Lee, Eunyoung Angela; Patel, Rakesh B; Kumskova, Mariia; Leira, Enrique C; Chauhan, Anil K; Shi, Yanrong; Cao, Suyi; Koehler, Raymond C; Dhandapani, Krishnan M; Khan, Mohammad Badruzzaman; Kamat, Pradip K; Arbab, Ali; Hess, David C; Herman, Alison L; Boisserand, Ligia; Sansing, Lauren H; Morais, Andreia; Jin, Xuyan; Aykan, Sanem; Imai, Takahiko; Ayata, Cenk; Nagarkatti, Karisma A; Lamb, Jessica; Diniz, Márcio A; Lyden, Patrick D; McCullough, Louise D; Aronowski, Jaroslaw
UNLABELLED:Inflammation, particularly mediated through interleukin-6 (IL-6) signaling, plays a critical role in stroke pathophysiology. High levels of IL-6 are associated with poor outcomes in stroke patients. Therapeutic inhibition of IL-6 signaling may offer a novel strategy to mitigate post-stroke damage and improve recovery. This study evaluated the efficacy of tocilizumab (TCZ), a clinically approved monoclonal antibody that blocks IL-6 receptor signaling, using data from the Stroke Preclinical Assessment Network (SPAN), a multi-center, randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled trial in preclinical stroke models. METHODS:We analyzed behavioral and MRI morphometry data from 701 rodents (both males and females; 1:1), including healthy young mice, diet-induced obese mice, aging mice, and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) treated with saline (N = 348) or TCZ (N = 353) at a dose of 100 mg/kg for mice, 10 mg/kg for rats after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). RESULTS:In the overall mouse cohort, TCZ did not significantly improve long-term sensorimotor recovery or reduce brain tissue loss measured by MRI. However, aging mice exhibited modest motor function improvements. In SHRs, TCZ treatment resulted in improved sensory-motor function, particularly in male rats, as demonstrated by enhanced corner test scores on days 7 and 28 post-MCAO. While TCZ in SHRs provided early (day 2) cerebroprotection with reduced lesion volume, it did not alter subsequent tissue loss, as measured by tissue atrophy at day 30. CONCLUSIONS:These results suggest that IL-6R blockade with TCZ was associated with functional improvement in aging mice (modest) and hypertensive rats (notably males), without durable effect of brain tissue loss. No benefit was observed in the overall mouse cohort. These findings support IL-6 signaling as a viable therapeutic target and warrant further investigation into IL-6 receptor inhibition as a potential treatment strategy for stroke recovery.
PMID: 41354124
ISSN: 1873-7064
CID: 5997802
Guidance for umbrella reviews of observational studies: A scoping review
Zhou, Carl; Fabiano, Nicholas; Gupta, Arnav; Wong, Stanley; Cobey, Kelly D; Moher, David; Ebrahimzadeh, Sanam; Ng, Jeremy Y; Dragioti, Elena; Shin, Jae Il; Radua, Joaquim; Cortese, Samuele; Shea, Beverley; Veronese, Nicola; Hartling, Lisa; Pollock, Michelle; Papatheodorou, Stefania; Ioannidis, John P A; Solmi, Marco
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:Umbrella reviews, or overviews of reviews, synthesize information using systematic reviews (SRs) as their unit of analysis. Although a formal guideline exists for reporting umbrella reviews of healthcare interventions (i.e. Preferred Reporting Items for Overviews of Reviews [PRIOR]), no formal guideline exists for conducting and/or reporting umbrella reviews of observational studies that examine epidemiological associations. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To review the existing guidance on conducting and/or reporting umbrella reviews of observational studies on epidemiological associations, as part of the process of developing a formal reporting guideline. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:We reviewed the scoping review conducted in the context of PRIOR development and identified documents through forward citation search in PubMed, Scopus, and manual search in Google Scholar, Google Search up to December 22, 2024. Documents, regardless of format, were included if they provided guidance for conducting and/or reporting umbrella reviews of observational studies (including meta-research studies of their features). Title/abstract screening and data extraction were performed independently and in duplicate and summarized narratively by stages of the umbrella review process. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:The search retrieved 4491 unique records, with 96 full texts assessed and eight documents included. These documents, published between 2014 and 2023, offered guidance across seven topic areas, but overall guidance on conducting and/or reporting is limited. These areas include the answerable questions, prerequisite considerations, the scope of umbrella reviews, searching for SRs, primary data collection, analysis, presentation, and assessing the certainty/quality of the body of evidence. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:There is a need for dedicated, practical, and evidence-based formal reporting guidelines for umbrella reviews of observational studies on epidemiological associations. This review lays the groundwork for developing the PRIOR-extension for such studies: the Preferred Reporting Items for Umbrella Reviews of Cross-sectional, Case-control, and Cohort Studies.
PMCID:12973145
PMID: 41815760
ISSN: 2692-9384
CID: 6011142
Neoadjuvant PD1 blockade with laser interstitial thermal therapy for recurrent high-grade glioma
Suryadevara, Carter M; Donaldson, Hayley; Khan, Hammad A; Groff, Karenna J; Kim, Claire D; Dogra, Siddhant; Gautreaux, Jose; Roberts, Leah Geiser; Young, Matthew G; Snuderl, Matija; Zagzag, David; William, Christopher M; McFaline-Figueroa, J Ricardo; Pilar Guillermo Prieto Eibl, Maria Del; Cordova, Christine A; Kurz, Sylvia; Barbaro, Marissa; Placantonakis, Dimitris G
BACKGROUND:While immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) induce potent responses against several systemic malignancies, clinical efficacy against high-grade glioma has been limited by immunosuppression, low mutational burden and limited lymphocyte infiltration into tumors. Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) induces coagulative necrosis and disrupts the peritumoral blood-brain barrier (BBB), creating a potentially antigenic milieu. We hypothesized that neoadjuvant and adjuvant ICI would synergize with LITT to potentiate antitumor immune responses and enhance survival. METHODS:This retrospective study is an exploratory case series that includes 9 adult patients with recurrent IDH wild-type glioblastoma (GBM, n = 6), IDH mutant high-grade astrocytoma (n = 2) and H3K27M mutant diffuse midline glioma (n = 1). All patients received neoadjuvant anti-PD1 ICI prior to LITT and most received adjuvant ICI (8/9). Disease burden was followed through radiographic volume segmentation of gadolinium-enhancing disease. Patients were followed for progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS). RESULTS:). There were no perioperative complications. All patients showed an initial increase in gadolinium-enhancing volume after LITT. Seven of 9 (78 %) patients demonstrated subsequent regression in total gadolinium-enhancing volume. Three non-contiguous satellite lesions naïve to laser ablation exhibited complete or near-complete regression in 2 patients. Median PFS was 5.90 months (range 1.00-41.23), and median OS was 9.97 months (range 1.20-41.23). CONCLUSIONS:Combination therapy with neoadjuvant and adjuvant pembrolizumab and LITT is feasible and safe in recurrent high-grade glioma. Responses may be more robust in certain molecular subtypes of glioma. Further studies are needed to investigate this potential synergy.
PMID: 41456377
ISSN: 1532-2653
CID: 6000922
Multisystem Imaging Manifestations of Fibromuscular Dysplasia
Sailer, Anne; Solomon, Nadia; Cahill, Anne Marie; Kim, Esther; Dixe de Oliveira Santo, Irene; Sullivan, Alexander E; Pellerito, John S; Czeyda-Pommersheim, Ferenc; Malhotra, Ajay; Marino, Angelo; Katz, Douglas; Revzin, Margarita V
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is a rare idiopathic, noninflammatory, nonatherosclerotic arteriopathy that leads to wall abnormalities in medium- and small-caliber arteries, typically resulting in alternating areas of stenosis and dilatation, or "beading" at angiography. Stenosis, dissection, and aneurysm can also be seen, and clinical manifestations depend on the vascular territory affected by FMD, with the renal and carotid arteries being most frequently involved. The diagnosis of FMD is made based on imaging features of FMD classified according to the angiographic appearance as focal FMD or multifocal FMD. Early diagnosis is often challenging, as mimics of FMD must first be excluded. The presence of aneurysm, dissection, or tortuosity alone is inadequate to establish the diagnosis, as these are variant manifestations; however, if a patient has focal or multifocal manifestations such as stenosis or stenosis and dilatation in one vascular bed, establishing the diagnosis of FMD, the presence of aneurysm, dissection, or tortuosity in additional vascular beds is considered multivessel involvement of all affected vascular beds. The cerebrovascular system, coronary arteries, renal and mesenteric arteries, and extremities should be evaluated for FMD involvement. The most serious potential complications of FMD are hypoperfusion secondary to aneurysm, dissection, or arterial occlusion, which can lead to hypertension, stroke, or myocardial infarction, as well as subarachnoid hemorrhage. Prompt intervention, blood pressure management, and revascularization are necessary to avoid devastating complications. Radiologists play an important role in timely identification of diverse FMD-associated morbidities and thus may contribute to early diagnosis and treatment of FMD. ©RSNA, 2026 Supplemental material is available for this article.
PMID: 41642726
ISSN: 1527-1323
CID: 6000382
Establishing a multinational walking blood bank in Haiti: operational, regulatory, and cultural lessons from the MSSM mission
Jacquez, Ricardo A; Gimpelson, Albert J; Llera, Brent; Chege, Anthony; Brobbey, Kofi; Fullencamp, Eykis; Mungai, David; Goutier, Richard; Van Benthem, Philip; Biorn, Jolene; Keating, Benjamin; Petrone, Patrizio; Dorrance, Kevin; Holcomb, John B
PMID: 41758358
ISSN: 1863-9941
CID: 6010532
Deep Learning-Enhanced Biomarker Interpretation on Cytology Cell Blocks: Foundations and Emerging Opportunities in Spatial Pathobiology
Xia, Rong; Littlefield, Nickolas G; Park, Christopher Y; Bao, Riyue; Cangiarella, Joan; Simsir, Aylin; Gu, Qiangqiang
Cytology cell block specimens are essential for diagnosing patients with advanced-stage malignancy and often represents the only available strategy for therapeutic biomarker evaluation. The use of cell blocks preserves tumor cells, captures high-grade or metastatic populations, and retains meaningful microenvironmental context, making them well suited for IHC analysis. With the rapid expansion of computational pathology, deep learning-assisted biomarker interpretation in cell blocks is emerging as a promising frontier for improving reproducibility, reducing interobserver variability, and enabling quantitative assessment of spatial tumor-immune interactions. Because many treatment-defining biomarkers are routinely assessed on cytology cell blocks, this mini-review highlights artificial intelligence-based applications for PD-L1, HER2, ER/PR, Ki-67, ALK/ROS1, BRAF V600E, and p16 markers that directly inform decisions about immunotherapy, targeted therapy, and hormone therapy. Also reviewed are emerging predictive models that convey biomarker status directly from morphology, extending the utility of artificial intelligence beyond conventional IHC interpretation. Finally, spatial pathobiology-related opportunities afforded by cell block preparations are discussed, and future directions for integrating artificial intelligence-enabled analysis into cytology workflows are outlined. Together, these advances position cytology cell blocks as an important platform for computational biomarker interpretation and morphology-driven precision oncology.
PMID: 41763533
ISSN: 1525-2191
CID: 6010722
Overview of Best Practices and Complications in Hemodialysis Access
Ye, Ivan B; Tan, Sally; Jasinski, Patrick T; Hines, George L
End-stage renal disease and the number of patients relying on hemodialysis are increasing. Hemodialysis access, such as autogenous arteriovenous (AV) fistulas, prosthetic AV grafts, and tunneled catheters, is essential yet also a major source of morbidity. This focused narrative review summarizes the best practices for access planning. Complications after AV fistulas are reviewed, including stenosis, thrombosis, infection, central venous stenosis, steal syndrome, ischemic monomelic neuropathy, high-output cardiac failure, and aneurysmal degeneration. Multidisciplinary collaboration between nephrology, vascular surgery, and clinicians taking care of dialysis patients is essential to optimize long-term outcomes for patients dependent on hemodialysis. This review is intended for non-nephrologists taking care of dialysis-dependent patients in their practice.
PMID: 41738845
ISSN: 1538-4683
CID: 6010062