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Featured researches published by Alaa Kandil.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2000

F-18 FDG uptake in breast infection and inflammation.

Siema M. Bakheet; John Powe; Alaa Kandil; Adnan Ezzat; Assem Rostom; John Amartey

PURPOSE Whole-body fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (F-18 FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) scanning has been useful in the management of breast cancer. However, F-18 FDG uptake sometimes has been associated with benign breast disease. Four cases are reported of F-18 FDG breast uptake caused by infectious or inflammatory mastitis that mimics malignant disease. METHODS AND RESULTS Two women had F-18 FDG whole-body scans for the evaluation of a large breast mass after inconclusive results of ultrasonography. In both cases, intense focal F-18 FDG breast uptake was noted that mimicked breast cancer. Histologic examination showed, in one patient, chronic granulomatous infiltration that likely represented tuberculous mastitis, because she showed a good clinical response to empirical anti-tuberculous treatment. The second patient had lactational changes associated with acute inflammation, and the culture grew Staphylococcus aureus. The breast mass completely disappeared 3 weeks after a course of antibiotic treatment. The other two patients had staging F-18 FDG PET scans 1 and 12 months after lumpectomy for breast carcinoma to detect residual, recurrent, or metastatic disease. Both scans showed a ring-like uptake in the involved breast, with superimposed intense focal uptake suggesting tumor necrosis centrally and malignant foci peripherally. In both cases, histologic examination revealed hemorrhagic inflammation secondary to postsurgical hematomas and no evidence of malignancy. CONCLUSION Acute or chronic infectious mastitis and postsurgical hemorrhagic inflammatory mastitis should be considered in patients who have a breast mass, especially those with a history of tenderness or surgery.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Malignant fibrous histiocytoma: a retrospective study of 109 cases.

Abdelaziz Belal; Alaa Kandil; Ayman Allam; Yasser Khafaga; Gamal El-Husseiny; Ashraf M. El-Enbaby; Mohamed Memon; Derek Younge; Paul Moreau; Alan Gray; Henrik Schultz

The purpose of this report is to assess the prognostic factors that could influence management and clinical outcome of malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) of soft tissues. Between 1975 and 1998, 109 patients diagnosed with MFH of the soft tissues, seen at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, have been reviewed. Of the 109 patients, 75 were men and 34 were women. The median age at presentation was 48 years (range: 3–94). Seven patients (6%) had regional nodal disease and 10 other patients (9%) with distant metastases were excluded from survival analysis. The remaining 92 patients had localized disease and had surgery as the primary treatment modality with or without radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. Extremities were the most common location (58%). Tumors less than 5 cm represented 32%, whereas 68% had tumors 5 cm or more. Low-grade tumors constituted 46%, and the remaining 54% were high grade. Thirty-seven percent of patients had positive surgical margins histologically after complete gross resection. The 5- and 10-year relapse-free survival (RFS) rates were 39% and 36%, respectively. Isolated local recurrence occurred in 20 patients (22%), isolated metastatic disease without local recurrence in 9 patients (10%), and combined local and metastatic disease occurred in 20 patients (22%). The overall 5- and 10-year overall survival (OS) rates were 50% and 43%, respectively. On multivariate analysis, tumor size and radiation dose were significant factors for RFS (p = 0.04 and 0.0005, respectively). In terms of OS, size, histologic grade, and surgical margins were significant factors on multivariate analysis (p = 0.001. 0.006, and 0.0001, respectively). Complete surgical resection at the time of primary tumor presentation is likely to afford the best chance for RFS and OS. Radiation therapy plays an important role, in combination with surgery for better local control, particularly in high-grade lesions, and in cases with positive surgical margins after wide complete gross excision. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy remains investigational.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2003

OPTIC GLIOMAS: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF 50 CASES

Yasser Khafaga; Maher Hassounah; Alaa Kandil; Imaduddin Kanaan; Ayman Allam; Gamal El Husseiny; Amani Kofide; Abdulaziz Belal; Mohammed Al Shabanah; Henrik Schultz; Derek Jenkin

PURPOSE Gliomas of the optic pathways are rare childhood central nervous system tumors. The treatment approach is controversial because of its rarity and the slow and unpredictable growth rates of these lesions. METHODS AND MATERIALS We reviewed 50 patients with the diagnosis of optic pathway low-grade gliomas treated between January 1980 and December 1995 at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Saudi Arabia. Thirty-five patients presented with chiasmatic/hypothalamic (posterior tumors), and 15 with optic nerve gliomas with or without chiasmal involvement (anterior tumors). Evidence of neurofibromatosis was present in 18 patients. Twenty-nine patients underwent surgery (total or partial resection), and 12 of these received postoperative radiotherapy (RT). Sixteen patients were treated with primary RT. The radiation dose varied between 42 and 54 Gy (median dose 50). RESULTS The overall actuarial survival rate was 87.5% at 5 years and 75% at 10 years, and the corresponding progression-free survival (PFS) rates were 69% and 62%. Patients with anterior tumors fared better than those with posterior tumors, with a 10-year PFS rate of 72% and 58%, respectively; the difference, however, was not statistically significant (p = 0.58). A PFS advantage was found in favor of patients with posterior tumors treated with RT (primary or postoperative) compared with no RT, with 5-year PFS rates of 68% vs. 42% (p = 0.03). This, however, did not translate into a survival advantage because of the success of salvage treatment. CONCLUSION In multivariate analysis, age (<3 vs. >3 years) emerged as the only significant determinant for PFS with patients <3 years old faring worse (p = 0.03). Neurologic and endocrine dysfunction are significant problems that need to be addressed.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Primary thyroid lymphoma: a retrospective analysis of prognostic factors and treatment outcome for localized intermediate and high grade lymphoma.

Abdel Aziz Belal; Ayman Allam; Alaa Kandil; Gamal El Husseiny; Yasser Khafaga; Nasser Al Rajhi; Gamal Ahmed; Alan Gray; Dahish Ajarim; Henrik Schultz; Adnan Ezzat

&NA; Non‐Hodgkins lymphoma presenting in the thyroid gland is uncommon. A review of the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH & RC) experience was performed to assess treatment outcome and prognostic factors in this rare extranodal presentation of localized lymphoma. Sixty patients treated at KFSH & RC between 1975 and 1995 were identified, and their records were reviewed retrospectively. Eight patients who had stage III or IV disease, low grade, or did not complete their prescribed treatment were excluded from the study. There were 38 female and 14 male patients with a median age of 59.5 years at the time of diagnosis (range: 10—87 years). Thirty‐five of the 52 patients underwent diagnostic partial or total thyroidectomy at other institutions based on a preoperative assumption of thyroid carcinoma. All 52 patients had non‐Hodgkins lymphoma of intermediate (94%) or high (6%) grade. Detailed staging was carried out in all patients; 16 patients (31%) had disease confined to the thyroid gland (stage IE), whereas 36 (69%) had associated disease in cervical lymph nodes and/or the mediastinum (stage IIE) disease. All patients were treated with curative intent. A total of 18 patients (35%) were treated with a single‐modality treatment—radiotherapy alone in 2, chemotherapy alone in 13, and surgery alone in the remaining 3 patients. The majority of patients (34/52; 65%) were treated with a combined‐modality approach. The overall relapse‐free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) at 5 years were 72% and 88%, respectively. There were no significant differences in outcome between those treated with single‐modality and those with combined‐modality therapy. A univariate analysis showed that the presence of mediastinal lymph node involvement was the most important prognostic factor affecting both RFS and OS. Patients with Hashimoto thyroiditis and without “B” symptoms were found to have a significantly higher RFS without influence on the OS. However, patients who had a good performance status (PS) of 0, 1, and 2 were found to have a significantly higher overall survival in comparison to those with poor performance status. Age, sex, stage, histology, lactic acid dehydrogenase level, tumor bulk, and the treatment modality were not found to correlate with RFS or OS. Mediastinal involvement and PS were found to be the most important independent prognostic factors influencing RFS and OS.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1997

Radiation therapy for Retinoblastoma: A retrospective review of 120 patients

D. Pradhan; Amy L. Sandridge; Paul B. Mullaney; Emad Abboud; Zeynel A. Karcioglu; Alaa Kandil; Mahmoud M. Mustafa; Alan Gray

PURPOSE To characterize the patient population and treatment outcomes in patients with Retinoblastoma (RB) referred for External Beam Orbital Radiotherapy (EBORT) to King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH&RC), Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from 1976 to 1993. METHODS AND MATERIALS A retrospective study of 120 patients with RB affecting a total of 192 eyes. Patients were divided into three groups. Group A are 60 patients (64 eyes) treated with EBORT to the intact eye to preserve vision. Reese-Ellsworth (RE) Staging was: 1: 12%; 2: 10%; 3: 12%; 4: 23%; and 5: 43%. Twenty-eight patients (47%) also received Vincristine, Adriamycin, and Cyclophosphamide chemotherapy (C/T). Mean follow-up, per patient, was 48.5 months. Standard treatment until 1992 was 45 Gy in 12 fractions of 3.75 Gy, three times weekly over 18 days. Assuming the alpha/beta ratio for early effects and tumor control at 10, Tk = 21 days, Tpot = 5 days, then the Biological Equivalent Dose (BED) was 62 Gy10 for early effects, and 101 Gy3 for late effects. Group B are 28 patients (28 eyes) treated for curative intent with EBORT to the orbit for locally advanced disease, usually after enucleation (24 eyes). Nineteen patients (83%) also had C/T. Mean follow-up was 22.6 months. Group C are 37 patients with advanced disease treated with radiotherapy for palliation. Seventeen (46%) also received C/T. Mean follow-up was 11.7 months. RESULTS Group A-following EBORT useful vision was retained in RE Stage 1 to 5: 7 of 7, 6 of 6, 4 of 8, 10 of 15, and 7 of 28 eyes, respectively. There was no significant difference between patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy and those who did not. Complications included cataract (27%), retinopathy (25%), vitreous hemorrhage (19%), and orbital deformities (11%). In Group B the local control rate was 71%. In Group C, 10 (27%) of the 37 patients were alive at last contact, and 27 (73%) were either terminal or dead of disease. None of Group A or B patients had positive CSF cytology, bone scan, or bone marrow examination. In Group C 19% had positive CSF cytology, and bone marrow, and 14% had a positive bone scan. CONCLUSIONS 1) EBORT preserved useful vision in a significant proportion of patients even in eyes with advanced RE Stage RB, but longer follow-up is likely to reveal an even higher complication rate with this regime. 2) High dose per fraction probably contributed to the increased complications. 3) Chemotherapy did not demonstrate any effect on retaining vision in this study. 4) For disease that is confined to within the eye clinically and radiologically, invasive procedures for CSF cytology, bone marrow examination, and bone scan do not seem warranted. 5) The optimum technique, fractionation, and dosage for RB is still not well defined.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996

TREATMENT RESULTS FOR 149 MEDULLOBLASTOMA PATIENTS FROM ONE INSTITUTION

Yasser Khafaga; Alaa Kandil; Arif Jamshed; Maher Hassounah; Edward Devol; Alan Gray

PURPOSE Retrospective analysis of patients with medulloblastoma to determine the effectiveness of previous treatments for medulloblastoma and plan for future management strategies. METHODS AND MATERIALS During the period March 1976 to December 1991, 172 patients with cerebellar medulloblastoma were referred to King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center. One hundred and forty-nine patients were treated with curative intent. There were six postoperative deaths, and 10 patients planned for radiotherapy treatment failed to complete the prescribed course. One hundred and thirty-three patients completed a course of radiotherapy after surgery. Adjuvant chemotherapy was not used routinely (six patients only). Tumors were staged retrospectively according to the Chang staging system. There were no T1 patients, 32 patients had T2 tumors, 76 had T3 tumors, and 29 had T4 tumors. The T stage could not be allocated in 12 patients. Ninety-nine patients required a shunting procedure either pre- or postoperatively. Forty-six patients had complete resection of tumor, 91 had incomplete resection, and 6 patients had biopsy only. The extent of resection could not he determined in six patients. The median radiation dose for the whole brain was 34 Gy, spine 32.5 Gy, and posterior fossa 52.8 Gy. Fraction sizes ranged from 1.7-1.8 Gy for craniospinal fields and 2 Gy for the posterior fossa boost. Seventy percent completed the prescribed course within 7 weeks. RESULTS Actuarial survival for the whole group of 149 patients was 53% at 5 years and 38% at 10 years. On univariate analysis, patients with T2 tumors did significantly better as compared to patients with T3 and T4 tumors. Survival of patients who had clinical and radiological complete resection of tumor at surgery was significantly better than patients with incomplete tumor removal. The presence of a ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt had a significant negative impact on survival. Treatment failure by site was analyzed with respect to the radiation dose. Doses greater than 50 Gy for the posterior fossa, and greater than 30 Gy for craniospinal axis, resulted in significantly better survival. On multivariate analysis, the only significant prognostic factor was the presence of a VP shunt in patients with T2 tumors. CONCLUSION T stage, VP shunt, radiation doses and extent of surgery were important prognostic factors. In this study, radiation doses of more than 50 Gy to the posterior fossa and 30 Gy to the craniospinal axis resulted in improved survival.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2000

High complete pathological response in locally advanced breast cancer using paclitaxel and cisplatin

Adnan Ezzat; Ezzeldin M. Ibrahim; Dahish Ajarim; M Rahal; Madras A. Raja; Robert K. Stuart; Asma Tulbah; Alaa Kandil; Osama A. Al-Malik; Shouki M. Bazarbashi

AbstractBackground.In an earlier study, we have demonstrated a high response rate in metastatic breast cancer using paclitaxel (P) and cisplatin (C). A phase II study using the same regimen (PC) has been conducted in locally advanced breast cancer (LABC). Methods.A total of 72 consecutive patients with non-inflammatory LABC (T2 ≥ 4 cm, T3 or T4, N0–N2, M0). Patients were scheduled to receive 3–4 cycles of the neoadjuvant PC (paclitaxel 135 mg/m2 and cisplatin 75 mg/m2 on day 1) every 21 days. Patients were then subjected to surgery and subsequently received 6 cycles of FAC (5-fluorouracil 500 mg/m2, doxorubicin 50 mg/m2, and cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m2) or 4 cycles of AC (doxorubicin 60 mg/m2, and cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m2). Patients then received radiation therapy, and those with hormone receptor positive tumors were given adjuvant tamoxifen intended for 5 years. Results.The median age was 39 years (range, 24–78). Clinically, 7%, 58%, and 35% of patients had T2 ≥ 4 cm, T3, and T4, respectively. Disease stage at diagnosis was IIB (33%), IIIA (27%), and IIIB (40%). Complete and partial clinical response to PC was demonstrated in 13 (18%), and 52 (72%) patients, respectively. Of those patients with evaluable pathologic response (68 patients), complete pathologic response (pCR) was achieved in 15 (22%) patients. At a median follow-up of 22 (± 3.5) months, 58 (81%) were alive with no recurrence, nine (12%) were alive with evidence of disease, and five (7%) were dead. None of the patients achieving pCR has developed any relapse. The median overall survival has not been reached for all 72 patients with a projected 3-year survival (± SE) of 90% (± 4%). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 42.1 (± 4.8) months with a projected PFS of 74% ± 7% at 3-years (for 68 patients). Conclusions.PC regimen in LABC produced a high pCR. The contribution of the other added modalities to survival could not be assessed.


Sarcoma | 1999

Ewing's Sarcoma of the Head and Neck: A Retrospective Analysis of 24 Cases.

Ayman Allam; Gamal El-Husseiny; Yasser Khafaga; Alaa Kandil; Alan Gray; Adnan Ezzat; Henrik Schultz


Archive | 2000

Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma in Children and Adolescents

Gamal El-Husseiny; Ayman Allam; Yasser Khafaga; Alaa Kandil; Abdel Aziz Belal; Lobna Shalaby; Gamal Mohamad; Mohamad Al-Shabanah; Nasser Al-Rajhi; Abdullah S. Al-Amro; Richard Derek Jenkin; King Faisal


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2000

25. Positron Emission Tomography in Hodgkin's Disease. Correlation with Computed Tomography and Gallium 67 Citrate Imaging.

A A Rifai; S Bazarbashi; Alaa Kandil

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Yasser Khafaga

King Faisal Specialist Hospital

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Alan Gray

King Faisal Specialist Hospital

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Adnan Ezzat

King Faisal Specialist Hospital

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Maher Hassounah

King Faisal Specialist Hospital

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D. Pradhan

Henry Ford Health System

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