Altaf Hashmi
Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Altaf Hashmi.
The Journal of Urology | 2002
Syed Adibul Hasan Rizvi; S.A.A Naqvi; Z. Hussain; Altaf Hashmi; Manzoor Hussain; Mirza Naqi Zafar; Sajid Sultan; H. Mehdi
PURPOSE We evaluated epidemiology, etiology, dietary and urinary risk factors, and the composition of calculi in pediatric stone formers in Pakistan. MATERIALS AND METHODS This retrospective study includes 1,440 children treated between 1987 and 2000. Case records were reviewed for demographics, etiology and clinical symptoms. Dietary and urinary risk factors were analyzed prospectively in idiopathic stone formers. Stone composition was analyzed by infrared spectroscopy. RESULTS There were 1,075 males and 365 females for a male-to-female ratio of 3:1. The peak age for renal and bladder stones was 6 to 10 and 1 to 5 years, respectively. Overall 795 stones (55%) were renal, 198 (14%) were ureteral and 447 (31%) were vesical. Bladder stones were present in 60% of cases in the mid 1980s but decreased to 15% in the mid 1990s. The clinical symptoms were abdominal pain in 511 patients (51%) and fever in 193 (19.5%). There were anatomical abnormalities in 96 patients (12%), metabolic abnormalities in 206 (25%), infection stones in 60 (7%) and idiopathic stones in 444 (55%). Urinary analysis in idiopathic stone formers revealed hypercalciuria in 17 (11%), hyperoxaluria in 62 (40%), hyperuricosuria in 41 (27%) and hypocitruria in 97 (63%). Diet involved a low intake of protein in 60 cases (44%), calcium in 45 (33%), potassium in 105 (77%) and high oxalate in 75 (55%). The composition was calcium oxalate in 362 stones (47%), ammonium hydrogen urate in 210 (27%) and struvite in 49 (6.4%). Stones recurred in 30 patients (2%). CONCLUSIONS The pattern of calculous disease changed from a predominantly lower tract site in the mid 1980s to the upper tract in the mid 1990s. Stone composition, urinary risk factors and dietary analysis suggest that diet, dehydration and poor nutrition are the main causative factors of stone disease.
The Journal of Urology | 2003
S.A.H Rizvi; S.A.A Naqvi; Z. Hussain; Altaf Hashmi; Manzoor Hussain; Mirza Naqi Zafar; Sajid Sultan; H. Mehdi
PURPOSE We evaluated the efficacy and safety of different modalities for pediatric urolithiasis in a developing country in 2 eras, namely before and after the advent of minimally invasive surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the records of 1,440 children younger than 14 years treated with various modalities during a 14-year period. From 1987 to 1995, 486 and 50 patients were treated with open surgery, and extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL, Dornier Medical Systems, Inc., Marietta, Georgia) and minimally invasive methods, respectively. Between 1996 and 2000, 518 and 386 children were treated with surgery and minimally invasive methods, respectively. RESULTS Of the 1,440 children 795 (55.2%) had renal, 198 (13.8%) had ureteral and 447 (31%) had bladder calculi. Of the renal stones 556 (70%), 177 (22%) and 62 (7.8%) were treated with open surgery, ESWL and percutaneous nephrolithotomy, respectively. Of the ureteral calculi 85 (43%), 37 (18.6%) and 76 (38%) were managed by ESWL, ureterorenoscopy and open surgery, respectively. Of the bladder calculi 307 (68%), 77 (17.2%) and 63 (14%) were treated with open vesicolithotomy, transurethral pneumatic cystolithotripsy and ESWL, respectively. The renal stone clearance rate was 98% after open surgery, 84% after ESWL and 68% after percutaneous nephrolithotomy monotherapy at 3 months of followup. Similarly the ureteral stone-free rate was 54% after ESWL and 86.9% after ureterorenoscopy. Of the patients with bladder calculi 48% and 93% become stone-free after ESWL and transurethral pneumatic cystolithotripsy, respectively. CONCLUSIONS The use of ESWL, percutaneous nephrolithotomy and ureterorenoscopy has resulted in treating a large number of children with a short hospital stay and early return to school. Open surgery is reserved only for complex stones.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2012
Mutahir Ali Tunio; Altaf Hashmi; Abdul Qayyum; Rehan Mohsin; Ahmed Zaeem
PURPOSE Whole-pelvis (WP) concurrent chemoradiation (CCRT) is the standard bladder preserving option for patients with invasive bladder cancer. The standard practice is to treat elective pelvic lymph nodes, so our aim was to evaluate whether bladder-only (BO) CCRT leads to results similar to those obtained by standard WP-CCRT. METHODS AND MATERIALS Patient eligibility included histopathologically proven muscle-invasive bladder cancer, lymph nodes negative (T2-T4, N-) by radiology, and maximal transurethral resection of bladder tumor with normal hematologic, renal, and liver functions. Between March 2005 and May 2006, 230 patients were accrued. Patients were randomly assigned to WP-CCRT (120 patients) and BO-CCRT (110 patients). Data regarding the toxicity profile, compliance, initial complete response rates at 3 months, and occurrence of locoregional or distant failure were recorded. RESULTS With a median follow-up time of 5 years (range, 3-6), WP-CCRT was associated with a 5-year disease-free survival of 47.1% compared with 46.9% in patients treated with BO-CCRT (p = 0.5). The bladder preservation rates were 58.9% and 57.1% in WP-CCRT and BO-CCRT, respectively (p = 0.8), and the 5-year overall survival rates were 52.9% for WP-CCRT and 51% for BO-CCRT (p = 0.8). CONCLUSION BO-CCRT showed similar rates of bladder preservation, disease-free survival, and overall survival rates as those of WP-CCRT. Smaller field sizes including bladder with 2-cm margins can be used as bladder preservation protocol for patients with muscle-invasive lymph node-negative bladder cancer to minimize the side effects of CCRT.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2011
Syed Adibul Hasan Rizvi; S.A.A Naqvi; Mirza Naqi Zafar; Z. Hussain; Altaf Hashmi; Manzoor Hussain; S. F. Akhtar; Ejaz Ahmed; Tahir Aziz; Gohar Sultan; S. Sultan; S. H. Mehdi; Murli Lal; B. Ali; Muhammed Mubarak; S. M. Faiq
The estimated incidence of end‐stage renal disease (ESRD) in Pakistan is 100 per million population. Paucity and high costs of renal replacement therapy allows only 10% to get dialysis and 4–5% transplants. Our center, a government organization, started a dialysis and transplant program in 1980s where all services were provided free of charge to all patients. It was based on the concept of community government partnership funded by both partners. The guiding principles were equity, transparency, accountability and development of all facilities under one roof. This partnership has sustained itself for 30 years with an annual budget of
Annals of Oncology | 2010
M. A. Tunio; Altaf Hashmi; M. Rafi
25 million in 2009. Daily 600 patients are dialyzed and weekly 10–12 receive transplants. One‐ and 5‐year graft survival of 3000 transplants is 92% and 85%, respectively. The institute became a focus of transplantation in Pakistan and played a vital role in the campaign against transplant tourism and in promulgation of transplant law of 2007, and also helped to increase altruistic transplants in the country. This model emphasizes that in developing countries specialized centers in government sector are necessary for transplantation to progress and community support can make it available to the common man.
Pediatric Transplantation | 2002
Syed Adibul Hasan Rizvi; S.A.A Naqvi; Z. Hussain; Altaf Hashmi; Fazal Akhtar; Mirza Naqi Zafar; Manzoor Hussain; Ejaz Ahmed; J. I. Kazi; A. S. Hasan; R. Khalid; S Aziz; Sajid Sultan
BACKGROUND A meta-analysis was conducted to assess the impact of postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) on overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and locoregional failure (LRF). MATERIALS AND METHODS The Medline, CANCERLIT, Cochrane library database and search engines were searched to identify randomized controlled studies comparing radical nephrectomy alone with radical nephrectomy followed by PORT for localized RCC. Further, radiotherapy techniques and associated side-effects were evaluated. RESULTS Seven controlled trials with a total patient population of 735 were identified. Pooled results from these trials showed a significant reduction of LRF in patients treated with PORT (P < or = 0.0001). However, there was no difference in OS (P = 0.29) and DFS (P = 0.14). The majority of patients was treated with larger field sizes with parallel-opposed anteroposterior fields. PORT was generally well tolerated; in total, six PORT-related deaths were seen. The resultant funnel plot was broader (Egger test P = 0.14) due to low number of patients. CONCLUSIONS PORT significantly reduces LRF but has no effect on OS and DFS. However, due to poor patient accrual and older radiotherapy techniques in previous studies, there is a need for a new trial to evaluate PORT using conformal and intensity-modulated radiotherapy techniques.
Urology Annals | 2011
Rehan Mohsin; Altaf Hashmi; Muhammed Mubarak; Gohar Sultan; Asad Shehzad; Abdul Qayum; Syed Ali Anwer Naqvi; Syed Adeeb ul Hassan Rizvi
Abstract: We retrospectively analyzed the results of 75 living‐related pediatric renal transplants performed at our center between January 1986 and December 1999. The major causes of end‐stage renal disease (ESRD) were glomerulonephritis (26%) and nephrolithiasis (16%), while the etiology was unknown in 50%. The mean age of the recipients was 12 yr (range 6–17 yr) and that of the donors was 39 yr (range 20–65 yr). The majority (73%) of donors were parents. Eighty five per cent of donors were one‐haplotype matched and the rest identical. Immunosuppression was based on a triple drug regimen. Thirty per cent of recipients were rapid metabolizers of cyclosporin A (CsA) (area under the curve [AUC]: < 6,000 ng/mL/h), while 16% were slow metabolizers (AUC: > 8,000 ng/mL/h). Forty three (57%) children encountered 59 rejection episodes, the majority of which (59%) were recorded in the first month post‐transplant. Seventy‐four per cent of the rejection episodes were steroid sensitive and the rest, except two, were resolved by therapy with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) or orthoclone thymocyte 3 (OKT3). After a mean follow‐up of 37 months, 17 (22%) grafts had chronic rejection and 76% of these recipients had previously experienced acute rejection episodes. The overall infection rate was high, necessitating two hospital admissions/patient/year. The majority (53%) of the infections were bacterial. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) were seen in 17 (23%) recipients. Twelve of these had ESRD as a result of stone disease and eight grafts were lost because of UTIs. Eight per cent of recipients developed tuberculosis (TB), and extra‐pulmonary lesions were seen in 50%. Surgical complications were encountered in eight patients. Free medication to all recipients and parental support ensured a compliance rate of 93%. Baseline growth deficit was seen in children of the two groups studied (the 6–12 yr and 13–17 yr age‐groups), with Z‐scores of – 2.39 and – 2.12, respectively. No growth catch‐up was observed at 12 and 24 months in either group. Post‐donation complications were seen most commonly in donors > 50 yr of age and included: proteinuria (> 300 mg/24 h, four patients), hypertension (three patients), and diabetes (one patient). Twenty‐four grafts were lost, 54% as a result of immunological and the rest as a result of non‐immunological causes, and 17 recipients died during the follow‐up period. Infections were the main cause of patient and graft loss. Overall 1‐ and 5‐yr graft and patient survival rates were 88% and 65%, and 90% and 75%, respectively.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2013
Syed Adibul Hasan Rizvi; S. Sultan; Mirza Naqi Zafar; S.A.A Naqvi; Ali Lanewala; Seema Hashmi; Tahir Aziz; A. S. Hassan; B. Ali; Rehan Mohsin; Muhammed Mubarak; S. Farasat; S. F. Akhtar; Altaf Hashmi; Manzoor Hussain; Z. Hussain
Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor/Ewings sarcoma (PNET/EWS) is primarily a tumor of soft tissues and bones. Primary localization of PNET/EWS in genitourinary organs is rare. No data on this localization of PNET/EWS are available in literature from Pakistan. We searched our adult uro-oncology records from 1994 till date and identified all cases of adult genitourinary and adrenal PNET/EWS diagnosed on histology and immunohistochemistry. Their case records were reviewed to obtain data on demographics, presentation, pathologic features, management and outcome. Six cases were found; all were young and had aggressive disease at presentation. Four had renal PNET/EWS. One case each of prostate and adrenal PNET/EWS was seen. Surgery and chemotherapy formed the mainstay of management. Three patients (50%) died during treatment, two were lost to follow-up and one case with renal PNET/EWS showed good initial response to chemotherapy but was later on lost to follow-up. In conclusion, PNET/EWS should be considered in the differential diagnosis of genitourinary malignant tumors in young patients. These tumors are aggressive with poor outcome.
Transplantation | 2016
S. Adibul Hasan Rizvi; Mirza Naqi Zafar; Fatema Jawad; Tahir Aziz; Z. Hussain; Altaf Hashmi; Manzoor Hussain; Fazal Akhtar; Ejaz Ahmed; Rubina Naqvi; S.A. Anwar Naqvi
The prevalence of pediatric RRT and transplantation are low in developing countries, 6–12 and <1 to 5 per million child population (pmcp), respectively. This is due to low GDP/capita of <
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2014
Deep Par Kash; Murli Lal; Altaf Hashmi; Muhammed Mubarak
10 000, government expenditure on health of <2.6–9% of GDP and paucity of facilities. The reported incidence of pediatric CKD and ESRD is <1.0–8 and 3.4–35 pmcp, respectively. RRT and transplantation are offered mostly in private centers in cities where HD costs