Chul Sohn
State University of New York System
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American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999
Hassan Aziz; Fazal Hussain; Chul Sohn; Rene Mediavillo; Audrey Saitta; Aneela Hussain; Mark Brandys; Peter Homel; Marvin Rotman
The purpose of this study was to determine prognostic significance of age and race as independent variables and to see role of age at the onset of breast carcinoma. A retrospective study was conducted of African American and white women with breast cancer treated at SUNY-Health Science Center Brooklyn and Kings County Hospital Center from 1983 to 1993. The objective was to analyze the differences in patterns of disease onset, as related to age and prognostic factors. A total of 738 patients were analyzed for race-adjusted comparison of stage, grade, disease-free survival, and median survival. Age at the time of diagnosis was analyzed to conduct age-specific comparisons of African American (AA) and white patients. The multivariate analysis indicated that AA women develop breast cancer 10 years earlier than white women (p = 0.00001). Corrected by stage and grade, i.e., chi2 test for stage-by-stage and grade-by-grade analysis has revealed that the AA women present with higher stage (p = 0.009), increased number of positive nodes (p = 0.00007), and more estrogen receptor/ progesterone receptor-negative tumors (p = 0.005). Further studies are required to probe into the etiologic possibilities of this significant difference. The important contributing factors could be hormonal, genetic, environmental, and socioeconomic. Obesity and dietary factors also need to be evaluated. Further studies to explore genetic susceptibility by ploidy is recommended to explain this significant difference. We conclude that the onset of breast cancer among AA women occurs at a significantly younger age than in white women, and their prognostic factors are poorer.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1997
K. Choi; Marvin Rotman; Hassan Aziz; Chul Sohn; Alan Schulsinger; Camilo Torres; Gady Har-El; Pradeep Chandra; Thomas P. Bradley; C. Julian Rosenthal
PURPOSE This is a prospective study to improve the therapeutic ratio in the treatment of patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal and paranasal sinus tumors by using split-course concomitant infusion cisplatin chemotherapy and hyperfractionated radiotherapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS From 1983 to 1993, 21 patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal and paranasal sinus tumors (T3 and T4, or recurrent tumors involving the facial bones and/or the base of the skull) were treated with a regimen of split-course hyperfractioned radiotherapy (1.2 Gy/fraction/bid) and concomitant infusion cisplatin (5-10 mg/m2/24 h). The therapy was given in three separate 2-week sessions with 1 to 2 week breaks between sessions. Seventeen of 21 patients were treated with curative intent with cumulative radiation doses ranging from 64.8 to 70.8 Gy. Four patients were treated with palliative intent to a total dose of less than 60 Gy or to a limited field due to previous irradiation. RESULTS Sixteen of 17 patients (94%) treated curatively achieved a complete response. Of the 16 patients who achieved complete response, 7 patients (50%) were alive at the time of analysis (36 to 126 months). One patient was alive at 4 years with no evidence of disease, and died in 10 years at the age of 80 of unknown cause. Two patients died of local recurrence at 21 and 45 months and one patient died of a cerebrovascular accident at 12 months with disease status unknown. Five patients died of distant metastases. The one patient who had a partial response died in 25 months with local disease and metastases to the bone and lung. Four patients that were previously irradiated received a reduced total dose or treated to a limited irradiation field. All had near complete responses, but died within a year of treatment, with the exception of one patient who died at 23 months. Acute reactions included intense erythema of the mucosa in all patients. Five of 21 (23%) developed punctate mucositis and 3 of 21 (14%) developed confluent mucositis. Hematologically, one patient developed neutropenia (1800 WBC/mm3) and one developed thrombocytopenia (38,000/mm3). A rising creatinine was observed in three patients (2.0, 1.7, 1.7) all of whom were treated with the higher 10 mg/m2/day dose of infusional cisplatin. In all three of these cases, the creatinine slowly returned to normal over a 6-month period. Hormonal evaluations were performed in three patients and all were within normal ranges. There was no evidence of neck fibrosis or trismus. One patient with gross recurrent disease of the orbit developed blindness of the involved eye due to corneal opacification. The orbital area had been reirradiated in this patient. CONCLUSIONS Concomitant infusion cisplatinum with hyperfractionated radiation improved tumor control, but did not increase normal tissue injury. Acute reactions were minimized by splitting the treatment with a 1- to 2-week break after each 2 weeks of radiation treatment. Late complications were not increased by using a hyperfractionated radiation regimen. The local failure rate was only 18% (3 of 17 patients), but the distant failure rate was 35% (6 patients). Further investigation is needed to prove if adjuvant chemotherapy after concomitant chemoradiation improves survival by decreasing the distant failure in such advanced cases.
American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1986
Hassan Aziz; Kwang N. Choi; Chul Sohn; R. Yaes; Marvin Rotman
We report a retrospective study of 15 patients with prostate carcinoma and diffuse bone metastases treated with sodium 32P for palliation of pain at Downstate Medical Center and Kings County Hospital from 1973 to 1978. The response rates, duration of response, and toxicities are compared with those of other series of patients treated with 32P and with sequential hemibody irradiation. The response rates and duration of response are similar with both modalities ranging from 58 to 95% with a duration of 3.3 to 6 months with 32P and from 75 to 86% with a median duration of 5.5 months with hemibody irradiation. There are significant differences in the patterns of response and in the toxicities of the two treatment methods. Both methods cause significant bone marrow depression. Acute radiation syndrome, radiation pneumonitis, and alopecia are seen with sequential hemibody irradiation and not with 32P, but their incidence can be reduced by careful treatment planning. Hemibody irradiation can provide pain relief within 24 to 48 h, while 32P may produce an initial exacerbation of pain. Lower hemibody irradiation alone is less toxic than either upper hemibody irradiation or 32P treatment.
Gynecologic Oncology | 1990
Jean Claude Remy; Therese Di Maio; Rachel G. Fruchter; Alexander Sedlis; John Boyce; Chul Sohn; Marvin Rotman
The clinical-pathologic records of 178 women with stage IB squamous cell carcinoma treated by radical hysterectomy and pelvic node dissection were reviewed to assess prognostic factors and outcome in relation to adjunctive pelvic radiation. Among 32 women with pelvic nodes metastases, 19 treated with adjunctive radiation had longer recurrence-free intervals and more extrapelvic metastases than 13 nonirradiated women. However, among irradiated women recurrences were more rapidly fatal, so that the survival of the two groups was similar. Among 54 women with deeply invading (10 mm or more) carcinomas confined to the uterus, 17 with adjunctive radiation had recurrence-free intervals and survivals similar to 37 women without radiation, despite more high-risk factors in the irradiated group. The findings suggest that adjunctive pelvic radiation may control pelvic recurrence but not extend survival.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1993
Hassan Aziz; Marvin Rotman; Fazal Hussain; Glenda Smith; Eva Chan; Kwang Choi; Chul Sohn; Joshua Halpern; David G. Schwartz; Isamettin Aral; Rachel G. Fruchter; Eli Serur
PURPOSE To compare the prognostic factors and survivals of black and white patients with endometrial carcinoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS A retrospective study was undertaken of a total of 290 patients with endometrial carcinoma who were treated similarly at the Health Science Center at Brooklyn and Kings County Hospital Center from 1975 and 1990. One hundred and thirty-six of 290 (47.2%) were black and 135/290 (46.9%) were white. Well-known prognostic factors affecting endometrial carcinoma were studied in black and white group of patients. Their overall survival and comparison of survival in each prognostic group were also estimated using multi-variate analysis. RESULTS Fifty-four percent of white patients had Stage I disease, compared to 45.9% in black patients. In Stage II, 51.6% were white and 48.4% were black, and in Stage III, 88.89% were black and 11.1% were white patients (p = 0.034). Fifty six percent Grade 1 patients were white and 44% were black. In Grade 2, 53.3% were white and 46.7% were black and in Grade 3 disease, 70.5% were black and 29.5% were white (p = 0.008). Up to the inner third of myometrial invasion had occurred in 60.6% of white patients and 39.4% in black patients. The middle third of the myometrium was invaded in 60.7% of white patients, and 39.3% of black patients. Thirty-seven percent of outer third of myometrial invasion was found in white patients and 63% in black patients (p = 0.038). Seventy-two percent of positive lymph nodes were found in black patients and 28.0% in white patients (p = 0.01). Sixty-one percent of patients with positive peritoneal cytology were black as compared to 38.7% in white patients (p = 0.017). The overall ten-year corrected survival for white and black patients was 72% and 40%, respectively (p = 0.0003). Survivals comparisons, when stratified by race and each prognostic group, showed statistically significant overall survival differences in favor of white patients. CONCLUSION Black patients with endometrial carcinoma have poor survival. Low socio-economic status (SES) would not explain these findings. More research is required to determine the cause of poor survival in black patients with endometrial carcinoma.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2002
Mahmoud El-Tamer; Sabir Hussain; Jeremy Weedon; Haji Chalchal; Ashis Chakrabarti; Chul Sohn; Albert S. Braverman
BackgroundThe relative prognoses of subsets of patients with T4 breast tumors, since the advent of neoadjuvant therapy, are unknown, although inflammatory carcinoma (T4d) is considered to have the worst prognosis.MethodsSubsets of T4 patients were analyzed for the incidence of distant metastases at presentation (M1; n=263). T4M0 patients treated with neoadjuvant therapy (n=126) were analyzed for relapse-free survival (RFS). T4d tumors with (Cut/CW+) and without (Cut/CW−) skin nodules, posterior fixation, or both were analyzed separately.ResultsFewer patients with T4d (Cut/CW−) tumors had distant metastases at presentation than T4d (Cut/CW+) patients or T4b and T4c patients (P=.001, .001, and .009, respectively). RFS was longer for T4b patients than for T4c patients (P=.018) or T4d (Cut/CW+) patients (P=.003). RFS of the T4d (Cut/CW+) patients was shorter than for T4d (Cut/CW−) patients (P=.050).ConclusionsThe incidence of distant metastases at presentation was lowest, and RFS was longest, for patients with T4d tumors not grossly involving the skin or posterior structures. Patients whose tumors grossly invaded both skin and posterior structures (T4c) or those with T4d tumors grossly invading either most frequently presented with distant metastases and had the shortest RFS.
International Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Boriana Kamenova; Albert S. Braverman; Michael Schwartz; Chul Sohn; Christopher S. Lange; Daniel Efiom-Ekaha; Marvin Rotman; Harold Yoon
BackgroundIn breast cancer (BC) patients the brachial plexus syndrome (BPS) has been reported to be due to loco-regional metastases or radiation plexopathy. Associated arm edema is considered more suggestive of the latter. Radiation therapy is the only effective treatment for BPS reported.MethodsThe charts of all BC patients who presented to our clinic from 1982 to 2006 with homolateral arm pain and neurological deficits, without humerus, cervical spine, or brain metastases, were reviewed.ResultsThere were 28 patients fulfilling these criteria for BPS. Supraclavicular, axillary or chest wall metastases developed synchronously with the BPS in 26 patients; in 21 they were recurrences, found 6–94 months (median 34 months) after primary BC treatment, while in 5 others they were progressing inoperable primary tumors and nodes. Arm edema first occurred at the same time as loco-regional metastases in 19 patients. Treatment for the BPS was administered to 22 patients; it was directed at their locoregional metastases. The BPS was initially treated with radiation (8 patients) or chemo- or endocrine therapy (14 patients); 19 (86%) had partial or complete remission of pain and neurologic deficits, with an 8-month median duration.ConclusionThe BPS in BC patients is due to loco-regional metastases and is often associated with arm edema. Chemoor endocrine therapy induced the remission of pain and deficits as frequently as radiation therapy.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 1997
Serge Dauphin; Steven Katz; Mahmoud El Tamer; Richard B. Wait; Chul Sohn; Albert S. Braverman
Locally advanced breast cancers may form large, infected skin ulcers, which were traditionally treated with radiation therapy. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is now standard treatment for locally advanced breast cancer.
Archives of Surgery | 1986
Monica Morrow; Albert S. Braverman; William L. Thelmo; Chul Sohn; Julian Sand; Maximo Mora; Thomas Forlenza; Jose Marti
Cancer | 1988
David H. Berger; Albert S. Braverman; Chul Sohn; Monica Morrow