16 results on '"Raid A. Jastania"'
Search Results
2. Quality of life assessment of breast cancer patients in Saudi Arabia
- Author
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Tahani H Nageeti, Huda R Elzahrany, Aisha O Gabra, Arwa A Obaid, and Raid A Jastania
- Subjects
Breast cancer ,quality of life ,Saudi females ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To assess the quality of life (QOL) of females with breast cancer in Saudi Arabia and its association with patients' demographic, social, and clinical data. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This analytical cross-sectional study was conducted among breast cancer patients attending King Abdullah Medical City, Makkah. Participants were asked to complete a self-administered structured questionnaire. We utilized the validated Arabic version of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QOL-C30 (EORTC-QOL-C30) and breast cancer module QLQ-BR23 (EORTC-QOL-BR-23). Data were analysed using SPSS; mean and standard deviation computed for continuous variables, and percentages for categorical variables. Student's t-test performed to compare mean scores for various groups. RESULTS: Eighty-eight women participated in the study. The participants had a mean global health score of 64.0, standard deviation (SD) = 27.7. Of the functional scales, role functioning scored the highest (mean 71.2, SD = 31), while social and emotional functioning scored the lowest, (mean 57 SD = 35.8) and (mean 59.5 SD = 32), respectively. On the symptom scales, the most troubling symptoms were fatigue and insomnia, (mean 48.86 SD = 29.4) and (mean = 48, SD = 35), respectively. On the disease-specific tool (QLQ-BR23), body image and future perspective scored the lowest with a mean of 60.2 SD = 35 and 42.0 SD = 39.6, respectively. The most distressing symptom was hair loss (mean 61.56 SD = 41). CONCLUSIONS: Our population showed an acceptable overall global health score. However, they scored low on the important functional and symptoms domains. This study implies that patient age, social, and physical factors were possible determinants of global health and QOL scores. The healthcare system of Saudi Arabia should, therefore, address all these different aspects of QOL of breast cancer survivors.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Perspective of Saudi women in the Makkah region on breast cancer awareness
- Author
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Tahani H Nageeti, Arwa A. N Abdelhameed, Raid A Jastania, and Rania M Felemban
- Subjects
Awareness ,breast cancer ,women's perspective ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the perspective of Saudi women in the Makkah region on breast cancer awareness and early detection. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A mixed method study was conducted among 25-65 years old healthy Saudi females from Makkah region during the awareness campaign in October 2014. The participants were recruited by personal invitations at the women's places of work and social gatherings. The initial invitations were issued by either the research coordinator or the investigator. All women were asked to complete a short questionnaire on basic knowledge on breast cancer. This was followed by focus group discussions. All interviews were carried out by female breast cancer consultant oncologists. All discussion transcripts were summarized and categorized into main themes; data presented as frequencies and percentages. RESULTS: Forty Saudi females, aged 25-65 years, were included in the study. Nearly 38% of them had never attended any awareness campaign on breast cancer. Only 10% of the participants correctly answered all five basic questions on the risk and early detection of breast cancer; 63% of the women had never been taught breast self-examination. Participants' perception was discussed in five focus groups. Four themes were identified during the discussions: knowledge about breast cancer and screening; resources of breast cancer awareness; social support for access to awareness program; and beliefs on breast cancer and early detection. CONCLUSION: We recommend that strategies on breast cancer awareness in our population should focus on early detection by improving the knowledge and skills of women. These strategies should include programs widely accessible through primary health-care centers and other health-care institutions. In addition, we recommend that physicians and family members should be involved in these programs.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Adamantinomatous Craniopharyngioma in an Adult: A Case Report with NGS Analysis
- Author
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Hisham Alkhalidi, Tahani H Nageeti, Khalid Alquthami, Kristoffer Valerie, Muhammad Saeed, Faisal A. Al-Allaf, Mohiuddin M. Taher, and Raid A. Jastania
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Mutation ,IDH1 ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,PDGFRA ,medicine.disease_cause ,Targeted therapy ,Exon ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Missense mutation ,Allele ,Synonymous substitution ,business ,neoplasms - Abstract
Purpose Several recent studies have documented CTNNB1 and BRAF mutations which are mutually exclusive for adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma (ACP) and papillary craniopharyngioma (PCP) tumors. This discovery is helpful in the development of novel targeted therapies in successful clinical trials with BRAF mutations in PCP cases. However, no such targeted therapy is available yet for ACP. Here, we report novel mutations, which are not previously reported, in a case of an adult ACP using NGS analysis. Results Patient DNA was sequenced using Ion PI v3 chip on Ion Proton. A total of 16 variants were identified in this tumor by NGS analysis, out of which four were missense mutations, seven were synonymous mutations, and five were intronic variants. In CTNNB1 gene a known missense mutation in c.101G>T; in TP53 a known missense mutation in c.215C>G; and two known missense variants in PIK3CA, viz., in c.1173A>G; in exon 7, and in c.3128T>C; in exon 21, were found, respectively. Seven synonymous mutations were detected in this tumor, viz., in IDH1 (rs11554137), in FGFR3 (rs7688609), in PDGFRA (rs1873778), in APC (COSM3760869), in EGFR (rs1050171), in MET (rs35775721), and in RET (rs1800861), respectively. Three known, intronic variants were found in genes, such as PIK3CA, KDR, and JAK3, respectively. Also, a 3'-UTR and a splice site acceptor site variant in CSF1R and FLT3 genes were found in this tumor. We have shown allele coverage, allele ratio, and p-value, for all these mutations. The p-values and Phred quality score were significantly high for these variants. Conclusion As reported in previous studies, in ACP tumors we found a CTNNB1 mutation by NGS analysis. The PIK3CA variants we detected were not known previously in ACP tumors. Finding the PIK3CA mutations in the ACP tumors may help develop targeted therapy for a subset of craniopharyngiomas with PIK3CA activating mutations. Clinical trials are in progress with specific PIK3CA inhibitors in advanced stages of many cancers.
- Published
- 2020
5. Mutation Profiling of Intracranial Myxopapillary Ependymoma by Next Generation DNA Sequencing
- Author
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Mohiuddin M, Taher, Abdulaziz Abdulnasser, Alhussini, Muhammad, Saeed, Mohammad, Athar, Najwa Abdalkabeer A, Bantan, Raid A, Jastania, Kamal Bakour, Balkhoyour, and Tahani H, Nageeti
- Subjects
Ependymoma ,Mutation ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Humans ,DNA ,Sequence Analysis, DNA - Abstract
Primary intracranial myxopapillary ependymomas (MPE) are very rare. In order to determine genomic changes in an intracranial MPE, we analyzed its mutation patterns by next generation DNA sequencing.Tumor DNA was sequenced using an Ion PI v3 chip on Ion Proton instrument and the data were analyzed by Ion Reporter 5.6.In this tumor, NGS generated 6,298, 354 mapped reads using the Ion PI v3 Chip. The average reads per amplicon was 29,365, 100% of amplicons had at least 500 reads and the amplicons read end-to-end were 97.58%. In this tumor, NGS data analysis identified 12 variants, of which two were missense mutations, seven were synonymous mutations and three were intronic variants. Missense mutation in c.395GA; in exon 4 of the IDH1 gene, and a missense mutation in c.215CG; in exon 4 of the TP53 gene were found in this tumor were previously reported. The known synonymous mutations were found in this tumor were, in exon 14 of FGFR3 in c.1953GA; in exon 12 of PDGFRA in c.1701AG; in exon 18 of PDGFRA c.2472CT; in exon 20 of EGFR in c.2361GA; in exon 13 of RET in c.2307GT; in exon 16 of APC in c.4479GA; and in exon 2 of MET in c.534CT. Additionally, a known intronic variant was identified in KDR and a known acceptor site splice variant in FLT3 (rs2491231) and a SNP in the 3 ' -UTR of the CSF1R gene (rs2066934) were also identified. Except, the frequency of IDH1 variant, the frequencies of other variants were high, and the p-values were significant and Phred scores were high for all of these mutations.The variants reported in this tumor have not been detected in myxopapillary grade I ependymoma tumor by NGS analysis previously and we therefore report these variants in this case for the first time.
- Published
- 2020
6. Follicular thyroid carcinoma within a thyroglossal duct cyst in adult
- Author
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Haddad H. Alkaff, Hamzeh Al-Arqen, Raid A. Jastania, Ibtihaj Nasseraldeen Bifari, and Ameen Z. Alherabi
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thyroglossal duct ,Thyroid Gland ,lcsh:Medicine ,Malignancy ,Thyroid carcinoma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,parasitic diseases ,Follicular phase ,Adenocarcinoma, Follicular ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Cyst ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Radionuclide Imaging ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Follicular carcinoma ,Thyroglossal Cyst ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Thyroidectomy ,Adenocarcinoma ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Thyroglossal duct cyst carcinoma is a rare malignancy, with an incidence of 0.7% to 1.6%. Most cases of thyroglossal duct cyst carcinoma are papillary carcinoma, with follicular carcinoma having been rarely reported. In this study, a 33-year-old man presented with a typical thyroglossal duct cyst and underwent surgical resection of the cyst, which was determined to be follicular carcinoma. We have reported this rare case to increase the awareness of such entities within the general otolaryngology and the community of head and neck surgeons, as well as among endocrine surgeons. SIMILAR CASES PUBLISHED: 10
- Published
- 2018
7. A qualitative study to improve the student learning experience
- Author
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Mohamad Abd El-Wahab, Ahmad Gouda, Rabab Mousa, Eman A.M. Beshr, Gehan F. Balata, Abeer Temraz, Hadeel Hisham, Batool F. Tag, Mohamed I.S. Abd El-Hady, Nashwa M. Ibrahim, Abeer Y. Mahdi, Raid A. Jastania, and Ibtehal El-Sofiani
- Subjects
Medical education ,05 social sciences ,DMAIC ,Six Sigma ,050301 education ,Educational institution ,Experiential learning ,Education ,Value stream mapping ,Project charter ,0502 economics and business ,Operations management ,Metric (unit) ,Psychology ,0503 education ,050203 business & management ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Purpose For any educational institution, student satisfaction is an important goal. Thus, the purpose of the study is to use a structured improvement process, define–measure–analyse–improve–control (DMAIC) methodology, to improve students’ satisfaction regarding their learning experience at the College of Pharmacy/Umm Al-Qura University. Design/methodology/approach The study first defines the problem and develops the project charter. Then the study visualizes the students’ learning experience process that is defined using a flow chart and a value stream map. Students’ voices were captured through a modified version of a survey developed by Levitz (2015-2016) that covered different aspects of the students’ learning experience. Next, Pareto analysis and cause-and-effect diagrams were used to identify the few vital factors affecting students’ satisfaction. The net promoter score was chosen as a primary metric to measure students’ satisfaction regarding their learning experience. Findings The analysis results revealed that there were eight areas of dissatisfaction: poor catering services, improper physical environment, students’ feedback being overlooked, inappropriate measures for course delivery, absence of appropriate advice about future career, inefficient field experience and finally and poor academic support. Based on these results, an improvement plan was prepared and the first stage of the plan was implemented. The success of the plan was investigated by measuring the net promoter score which was increased by about 11.9 per cent after implementation of the first stage of the plan. Originality/value The study emphasizes that the DMAIC methodology can be applied successfully to improve students’ learning experience and to discover additional value for students.
- Published
- 2017
8. Quality of life assessment of breast cancer patients in Saudi Arabia
- Author
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Tahani H, Nageeti, Huda R, Elzahrany, Aisha O, Gabra, Arwa A, Obaid, and Raid A, Jastania
- Subjects
Breast cancer ,quality of life ,Saudi females ,education ,Original Article ,humanities - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To assess the quality of life (QOL) of females with breast cancer in Saudi Arabia and its association with patients' demographic, social, and clinical data. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This analytical cross-sectional study was conducted among breast cancer patients attending King Abdullah Medical City, Makkah. Participants were asked to complete a self-administered structured questionnaire. We utilized the validated Arabic version of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QOL-C30 (EORTC-QOL-C30) and breast cancer module QLQ-BR23 (EORTC-QOL-BR-23). Data were analysed using SPSS; mean and standard deviation computed for continuous variables, and percentages for categorical variables. Student's t-test performed to compare mean scores for various groups. RESULTS: Eighty-eight women participated in the study. The participants had a mean global health score of 64.0, standard deviation (SD) = 27.7. Of the functional scales, role functioning scored the highest (mean 71.2, SD = 31), while social and emotional functioning scored the lowest, (mean 57 SD = 35.8) and (mean 59.5 SD = 32), respectively. On the symptom scales, the most troubling symptoms were fatigue and insomnia, (mean 48.86 SD = 29.4) and (mean = 48, SD = 35), respectively. On the disease-specific tool (QLQ-BR23), body image and future perspective scored the lowest with a mean of 60.2 SD = 35 and 42.0 SD = 39.6, respectively. The most distressing symptom was hair loss (mean 61.56 SD = 41). CONCLUSIONS: Our population showed an acceptable overall global health score. However, they scored low on the important functional and symptoms domains. This study implies that patient age, social, and physical factors were possible determinants of global health and QOL scores. The healthcare system of Saudi Arabia should, therefore, address all these different aspects of QOL of breast cancer survivors.
- Published
- 2019
9. EGFRvIII expression and isocitrate dehydrogenase mutations in patients with glioma
- Author
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Ghida Dairi, Khalid Alquthami, Mohiuddin M. Taher, Faisal A. Al-Allaf, Ejaz Muhammad Butt, Neda M. Bogari, Hisham Alkhalidi, Tahani H Nageeti, Kristoffer Valerie, Mohammad Athar, and Raid A. Jastania
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Silent mutation ,Cancer Research ,IDH1 ,education ,Population ,Saudi Arabia ,Biology ,IDH2 ,molecular diagnostics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,molecular pathology ,glioma ,Glioma ,medicine ,Intronic Mutation ,Missense mutation ,brain cancer ,education.field_of_study ,RT-qPCR ,next-generation DNA sequencing ,Articles ,personalized medicine ,medicine.disease ,capillary sequencing ,030104 developmental biology ,Isocitrate dehydrogenase ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,isocitrate dehydrogenase - Abstract
Molecular pathology and personalized medicine are still being evolved in Saudi Arabia, and genetic testing for the detection of mutations as cancer markers have not been established in the diagnostics laboratories in Saudi Arabia. The aim of the present study was to determine the prevalence of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH1 and IDH2) mutations and epidermal growth factor receptor variant (EGFRv)III transcript expression in Saudi Arabian patients with glioma. Out of 117 brain tumors tested by reverse transcription-quantitative PCR for EGFRvIII, 41 cases tested positive. In the glioblastoma (GBM) category, 28/55 tumors were positive, in astrocytoma tumors 5/22, and in oligodendrogliomas 4/13 cases were positive respectively. EGFRvIII transcript was sequenced by capillary electrophoresis to demonstrate the presence of EGFRvIII-specific junction where exons 2–7 were deleted. In the present study 106 tumors were sequenced for IDH1 exon-4 mutations using the capillary sequencing method. The most common substitution missense mutation c.395G>A was found in 16 tumors. In the case of adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma, a novel missense mutation in c.472C>T was detected in IDH2 gene. Using next-generation sequencing (NGS), 74 tumors were sequenced for the IDH1 gene, and a total of 8 missense variants were identified in 36 tumors in a population of Saudi Arabia. The missense mutation (c.395G>A) was detected in 29/36 of tumors. A novel intronic mutation in c.414+9T>A was found in 13 cases in the IDH1 gene. In addition, one case exhibited a novel synonymous mutation in c.369A>G. Eleven tumors were found to have compound mutations in the IDH1 gene. In IDH2 gene, out of a total of 16 variants found in 6 out of 45 tumors, nine were missense, five were synonymous and one was intronic. This is the first report from Saudi Arabian laboratories analyzing glioma tumors for EGFRvIII expression, and the first study from Saudi Arabia to analyze IDH mutations in gliomas using the capillary and NGS methods.
- Published
- 2020
10. Next generation DNA sequencing of atypical choroid plexus papilloma of brain: Identification of novel mutations in a female patient by Ion Proton
- Author
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Muhammad Saeed, Abdellatif Bouazzaoui, Faisal A. Allaf, Tahani H Nageeti, Amal Ali Hassan, Ghida Dairi, Zainularifeen Abduljaleel, Hisham Alkhalidi, Mohammad Athar, Raid A. Jastania, Wafa M. El‑Bjeirami, and Mohiuddin M. Taher
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Nonsense mutation ,Biology ,DNA sequencing ,ataxia-telangiectasia ,ion proton ,Frameshift mutation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Missense mutation ,Choroid plexus tumor ,Genetics ,brain cancer ,next generation DNA sequencing ,Articles ,Choroid plexus carcinoma ,medicine.disease ,Choroid plexus papilloma ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,ATM ,choroid plexus papilloma ,Phred quality score - Abstract
Choroid plexus papilloma (CPP) is a rare benign tumor of the central nervous system that is usually confined to the cerebral ventricles. According to the World Health Organization, CPP corresponds to a grade I atypical CPP (a-CPP); however, it can become more aggressive and reach grade II, which can rarely undergo malignant transformation into a choroid plexus carcinoma (grade III). To the best of our knowledge, identification of these tumors mutations by next generation DNA sequencing (NGS) has not been yet reported. In the present study, NGS analysis of an a-CPP case was performed. Data were analyzed using Advaita Bioinformatics i-VariantGuide and Ion Reporter 5.6 programs. The results from NGS identified 12 novel missense mutations in the following genes: NOTCH1, ATM, STK36, MAGI1, DST, RECQL4, NUMA1, THBS1, MYH11, MALT1, SMARCA4 and CDH20. The PolyPhen score of six variants viz., DST, RECQL4, NUMA1, THBS1, MYHI1 and SMARCA4 were high, which suggested these variants represents pathogenic variants. Two novel insertions that caused frameshift were also found. Furthermore, two novel nonsense mutations and 14 novel intronic variants were identified in this tumor. The novel missense mutation detected in ATM gene was situated in c.5808A>T; p. (Leu1936Phe) in exon 39, and a known ATM mutation was in c.5948A>G; p. (Asn1983Ser). These novel mutations had not been reported in previous database. Subsequently, the quality statistics of these variants, including allele coverage, allele ratio, P-value, Phred quality score, sequencing coverage, PolyPhen score and alleles frequency was performed. For all variants, P-value was highly significant and the Phred quality score was high. In addition, the results from sequencing coverage demonstrated that 97.02% reads were on target and that 97.88% amplicons had at least 500 reads. These findings may serve at determining new strategies to distinguish the types of choroid plexus tumor, and at developing novel targeted therapies. Development of NGS technologies in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia may be used in molecular pathology laboratories.
- Published
- 2018
11. How Laboratory Information System Improves Patient Safety
- Author
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Raid A. Jastania
- Subjects
Translational bioinformatics ,Knowledge management ,Human Dimension ,business.industry ,Process (engineering) ,Computer science ,Ocean Engineering ,Health informatics ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS ,Patient safety ,Informatics ,Health care ,Information system ,business - Abstract
One of the major principles in healthcare is patient safety. Any intervention in healthcare should be safe, regardless of its benefits. The implementation of laboratory information system (LIS) has a multidimensional effect on the healthcare system. LIS plays a role in medical informatics, consumer informatic and translational bioinformatics. Nevertheless, implementation of LIS impacts patient safety in many different aspects. The aim of this paper is to investigate how patient safety can be improved by laboratory information system. The author conducted this review by searching PubMed, Google Scholar, and the World Wide Web (reports, blogs, news) for articles published in English on the following keywords were searched: laboratory information system, patient safety, and quality. We found that there is a broad framework of dimensions to evaluate LIS. The framework is based on two concepts: brain-to-brain loop process, and HOT-fit dimensions. The brain-to-brain loop process can be divided into five phases: 1) pre-test, 2) pre-analytic, 3) analytic, 4) post-analytic and 5) post-test phases. In each phase, LIS provides functions to facilitate performing different tasks. In the HOT-fit model, there are three broad dimensions that need to be analyzed and considered in LIS. These are: 1) Human dimension, 2) Organizational dimensions, and 3) Technology dimensions. LIS plays a critical role in patient safety in the components of this framework. We concluded that Implementation of LIS has certainly a multidimensional impact on patient safety in different aspects on informatics. This includes LIS roles in three field of health informatics: medical informatics, consumer informatics and translational bioinformatics. LIS can integrate these fields to provide safer healthcare.
- Published
- 2019
12. Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the cervix
- Author
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Raid A. Jastania and Tahani H Nageeti
- Subjects
Adult ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:Medicine ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Medicine ,Stage (cooking) ,Sarcomatoid carcinoma ,Pathological ,Cervix ,Cervical cancer ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Radiation therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Female ,business - Abstract
Sarcomatoid carcinoma is a rare pathological entity of the cervix. A case of FIGO stage III sarcomatoid carcinoma of the cervix is reported. The patient was treated with concurrent radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Despite the initial excellent local response to therapy, she developed an early metastatic disease. In a review of the published studies, only 19 cases were reported on this type of cervical cancer.
- Published
- 2012
13. Assessment of malignancy rate in thyroid nodules according to the Bethesda system of fine-needle aspiration. Report from a tertiary center in the Southwestern region of Saudi Arabia
- Author
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Mubarak M, Al-Shraim, Omaia M, Kaood, Mahmoud R, Hussein, Ali M, Al-Ahmary, Gharamah Y, Al Shehri, Raid A, Jastania, Ahmed A, Mahfouz, and Saeed A, Abu-Eshy
- Subjects
Biopsy, Fine-Needle ,Carcinoma ,Saudi Arabia ,Thyroid Gland ,Carcinoma, Papillary ,Cohort Studies ,Thyroid Cancer, Papillary ,Terminology as Topic ,Adenocarcinoma, Follicular ,Adenoma, Oxyphilic ,Humans ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Thyroid Nodule ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To determine the rates of malignancy of thyroid nodules in each standard cytologic diagnostic category of the Bethesda system.In a retrospective cohort study from October 1998 to April 2007 at the Department of Pathology, Aseer Central Hospital, Southwestern region of Saudi Arabia, all cases of thyroid nodules that underwent preoperative cytologic examination by fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and concurrent postoperative histopathologic examination were included. All FNA diagnoses were reclassified using the thyroid FNA Bethesda reporting system, including non-diagnostic (insufficient), benign, atypical follicular lesion of undetermined significance (AFLUS), neoplasm, suspicious of malignancy, and malignant groups. The rate of malignancy based on final histopathologic evaluation was analyzed for each of these cytologic groups.A total of 323 thyroid fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) diagnoses were reclassified into non-diagnostic 6.2%, benign 57.3%, AFLUS 13.6%, follicular and Hurthle cell neoplasms 16.1%, suspicious of malignancy 1.5%, and malignant 5.3% groups. The corresponding rate of malignancy on histopathologic examination was as follows: 35% in the non-diagnostic group, 10.3% in the benign group, 15.9% in AFLUS group, 32.7% in follicular and Hurthle cell neoplasms, 60% in the suspicious of malignancy group, and 94% in the malignant group.Applying a standard terminology reporting system for thyroid FNA may enhance the communication between pathologists and clinicians, assists them to find out the rate of malignancy in each cytologic group, and facilitating a more consistent approach for patients' management.
- Published
- 2012
14. Double adenomas of the pituitary: transcription factors Pit-1, T-pit, and SF-1 identify cytogenesis and differentiation
- Author
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Raid A. Jastania, K. Kovacs, Mubarak Al-Shraim, Sylvia L. Asa, and Khaled O. Alsaad
- Subjects
Adenoma ,Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cellular differentiation ,Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear ,Biology ,Pituitary neoplasm ,Steroidogenic Factor 1 ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Endocrinology ,medicine ,Humans ,Pituitary Neoplasms ,Receptor ,Transcription factor ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Homeodomain Proteins ,Cell Differentiation ,Neoplasms, Second Primary ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,Female ,T-Box Domain Proteins ,Transcription Factor Pit-1 ,Immunostaining ,Hormone ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
The diagnosis of double adenomas of the pituitary can be very complex and is usually suspected on histological assessment of a specimen and confirmed by immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies. The most commonly applied technique is currently immunohistochemical staining to localize the six pituitary hormones. Application of this technique may fail to identify double adenomas when hormone immunoreactivity is weak or absent in one or both cell populations. We examined specimens from eight patients diagnosed with double adenomas over a 15-yr period. We tested the ability to detect the difference in the two adenomas in each case using three immunostains for the pituitary transcription factors Pit-1, T-pit, and SF-1. We conclude that immunohistochemical localization of the transcription factors Pit-1, T-pit, and SF-1 accurately detects and classifies the distinct cytodifferentiation of double adenomas of the pituitary.
- Published
- 2005
15. Granulomatous hypophysitis with psammoma bodies: a diagnostic dilemma
- Author
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Shereen Ezzat, K. Kovacs, Tahani H Nageeti, Raid A. Jastania, and Sylvia L. Asa
- Subjects
Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psammoma body ,Hypophysitis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Pituitary Diseases ,Diagnostic dilemma ,Hypopituitarism ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Endocrinology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Sella Turcica ,Idiopathic disorder ,Inclusion Bodies ,Inflammation ,Granuloma ,business.industry ,Calcinosis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psammoma Body Formation ,Granulomatous hypophysitis ,Female ,business - Abstract
We report a case of granulomatous hypophysitis with an unusual pathologic finding of psammoma bodies. This finding has not previously been described in the literature. The diagnostic implications of this finding are complex, and the pathogenesis of psammoma body formation in this idiopathic disorder remains unknown.
- Published
- 2005
16. Follicular thyroid carcinoma within a thyroglossal duct cyst in adult
- Author
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Ibtihaj Nasseraldeen Bifari, Ameen Alherabi, Haddad Alkaff, Hamzeh Al-Arqen, and Raid Abdulrahman Jastania
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Thyroglossal duct cyst carcinoma is a rare malignancy, with an incidence of 0.7% to 1.6%. Most cases of thyroglossal duct cyst carcinoma are papillary carcinoma, with follicular carcinoma having been rarely reported. In this study, a 33-year-old man presented with a typical thyroglossal duct cyst and underwent surgical resection of the cyst, which was determined to be follicular carcinoma. We have reported this rare case to increase the awareness of such entities within the general otolaryngology and the community of head and neck surgeons, as well as among endocrine surgeons. SIMILAR CASES PUBLISHED: 10
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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