Deniz Tugcu
Istanbul University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Deniz Tugcu.
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis-Hemostasis | 2012
Zafer Salcioglu; Arzu Akcay; Hulya Sayilan Sen; Gonul Aydogan; Ferhan Akici; Deniz Tugcu; Nuray Aktay Ayaz; Zafer Baslar
Congenital factor VII deficiency is the most common form of rare coagulation factor deficiencies. This article presents a retrospective evaluation of 73 factor VII deficiency cases that had been followed at our center. The study consisted of 48 males and 25 females (2 months-19 years). Thirty-one (42.5%) of them were asymptomatic. Out of symptomatic patients, 17 had severe clinical symptoms, whereas 8 presented with moderate and 17 with mild symptoms. The symptoms listed in order of frequency were as follows: epistaxis, petechia or ecchymose, easy bruising, and oral cavity bleeding. The genotype was determined in 8 patients. Recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) was used to treat 49 bleeding episodes in 8 patients after 2002. In 2 patients with repeated central nervous system bleeding prophylaxis with rFVIIa was administered. No allergic and thrombotic events were observed during both treatment and prophylaxis courses. Antibody occurrence was not detected in the patients during treatment.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2015
Funda Erol Cipe; Cigdem Aydogmus; Nina Kathrin Serwas; Deniz Tugcu; Metin Demirkaya; Ferhan Akıcı Biçici; Arzu Babayigit Hocaoglu; Figen Dogu; Kaan Boztug
To the Editor: IL-2 inducible T-cell kinase (ITK) deficiency has been identified as an autosomal recessive form of lymphoproliferative disease.[1] Until now, four different mutations have been identified in the ITK gene including missense (c.C1085T);[1] nonsense (c.C1764G;[2] c.C49T (as in our patients);[3]) and frameshift (c.468delT[4,5]) mutations. Here, we present two affected siblings with a homozygous nonsense mutation in the ITK gene.
Pediatric Hematology and Oncology | 2010
Zeynep Karakas; Deniz Tugcu; Aysegul Unuvar; Didem Atay; Arzu Akcay; Hakan Gedik; Hülya Kayserili; Oner Dogan; Sema Anak; Omer Devecioglu
Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is one of the familial cancers characterized by different tumors and hereditary TP53 mutations. The adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) association with acute leukemia is unusual in childhood, even in LFS. The authors here present a family with pR337P mutation in TP53 gene who had a child with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and associated adrenocortical carcinoma as a case 1 and his cousin with brain tumor as a case 2. A hereditary TP53 mutation supported the diagnosis of LFS in this family. The patients had many difficulties in treatment strategies and succumbed to death. The availability of a reliable molecular marker to detect the R337P TP53 mutation allows the rapid identification of carriers in families that have a child with ACC. Once identified, carriers could be screened for early detection of ACC by imaging and endocrine studies and should be given psychological support to prevent anxiety for death. Whether early detection of ACC will reduce the mortality in these patients remains to be determined.
Annals of Saudi Medicine | 2015
Deniz Tugcu; Ozden Turel; Gonul Aydogan; Arzu Akcay; Zafer Salcioglu; Ferhan Akici; Hulya Sayilan Sen; Metin Demirkaya; Necati Taşkın; Nezahat Gürler
Achromobacter xylosoxidans is an aerobic gram-negative bacillus and important cause of bacteremia in immunocompromised patients. We describe a leukemia pediatric patient with severe neutropenia who developed bacteremia with A xylosoxidans resistant to multiple antibiotics, and treated the patient with tigecycline and piperacillin-tazobactam in addition to supportive medications.
Case reports in pediatrics | 2016
Helen Bornaun; Kazim Oztarhan; Tugba Erener-Ercan; Reyhan Dedeoglu; Deniz Tugcu; Cigdem Aydogmus; Merih Cetinkaya; Sultan Kavuncuoglu
Cardiac rhabdomyoma often shows spontaneous regression and usually requires only close follow-up. However, patients with symptomatic inoperable rhabdomyomas may be candidates for everolimus treatment. Our patient had multiple inoperable cardiac rhabdomyomas causing serious left ventricle outflow-tract obstruction that showed a dramatic reduction in the size after everolimus therapy, a mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor. After discontinuation of therapy, an increase in the diameter of masses occurred and everolimus was restarted. After 6 months of treatment, rhabdomyomas decreased in size and therapy was stopped. In conclusion, everolimus could be a possible novel therapy for neonates with clinically significant rhabdomyomas.
Pediatric Hematology and Oncology | 2015
Metin Demirkaya; Deniz Tugcu; Arzu Akcay; Aydogan G; Akıcı F; Salcioglu Z; Ekmekci H; Betül Sevinir; Balci Ekmekci O
In this study, we aimed to determine serum adrenomedullin levels and compare them with levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT). Cancer patients aged 0–18 years who experienced febrile neutropenia attacks were included in the study. Adrenomedullin, CRP, and PCT were analyzed at admission, day 3, and days 7–10 later. Fifty episodes of febrile neutropenia that developed in 37 patients were analyzed in this study. The mean age of the patients was 7.5 ± 4.7 (1–18) years. The patients had leukemia (73%), solid tumors (19%), and lymphoma (8%). The percentages of the patients in the clinically documented infection (CDI), fever of unknown origin (FUO), sepsis, and microbiological documented infection (MDI) categories were 34%, 34%, 20%, and 12%, respectively. During the study period, four patients were lost. In the MDI group, adrenomedullin levels on day 3 were significantly higher than those in the CDI and FUO groups. PCT levels were significantly higher in the sepsis group than those in the CDI group at admission, day 3, and days 7–10. In the sepsis group, PCT levels on days 7–10 days were significantly higher than those in the sepsis group. PCT values from the deceased patients on days 7–10 were significantly higher than those from patients who survived. CRP levels did not differ significantly among the febrile neutropenia groups. First, in our study, adrenomedullin was used as a biomarker in the febrile neutropenia episodes of children with cancer. Among adrenomedullin, CRP, and PCT, procalcitonin demonstrates the highest correlation with the severity of infection.
Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2013
Zafer Salcioglu; Deniz Tugcu; Arzu Akcay; Hulya Saylan Sen; Gonul Aydogan; Ferhan Akici; Metin Demirkaya; Nuray Aktay Ayaz; Serdar Sander; Gulay Aydn Tireli; Zafer Baslar
Congenital rare factor deficiencies may present in infancy by life-threatening bleedings or may not show any symptoms until adulthood. It is reported more commonly in countries having consanguineous marriages. Data regarding surgical interventions of rare congenital factor deficiencies are based on case reports and records of guidelines. There are no well documented and separately prepared directories related to pre-surgical and prophylactic approaches of surgical interventions of these deficiencies. Our retrospective study consisted of 171 rare factor deficiencies that were followed up in our clinic, and of whom 61 had 88 surgical interventions between 1990 and 2012. Of these patients, 45 were having factor VII deficiency, and factor V, X, XI, XIII and fibrinogen deficiencies were present in five, four, three, two and two patients, respectively. In 23 patients, factor coagulant activities were under 5% (37.7%), in 15 it was between 5 and 30% (24.6%), and in 23 between 30 and 50% (37.7%). Twenty-eight were symptomatic and 33 were asymptomatic. Information of 51 (83.6%) male and 10 (16.4%) female patients with an age range of 5–25 years (13 ± 5.27), whose age at presentation ranged between 3 weeks and 18 years (7 ± 4.66), were retrieved from patient records and from the records contained in the data-processing environment introduced in 2005. The rate of familial consanguinity was 49.2%. Of the surgical interventions, 24 (27.3%) were major, 24 (27.3%) were minor and 40 (45.4%) were circumcision. We used fresh frozen plasma in 32, recombinant factor (rF)VIIa in 20, prothrombin complex concentrate in five and fibrinogen in three patients during surgical interventions. In 18 patients, antifibrinolytic agents were also used. In 27 patients, surgical interventions were applied without any replacement therapy. No additional doses were required after surgical prophylaxis doses. Thrombotic events were not observed. Antibody occurrence was not detected in these patients. In our study, we evaluated preparation for surgical procedures, factor replacement therapy before surgical intervention and postoperative follow-up in patients with rare coagulation factor deficiency.
Lancet Oncology | 2016
Rejin Kebudi; İbrahim Bayram; Begül Yağcı-Küpeli; Serhan Küpeli; Gülay Sezgin; Esra Pekpak; Yeşim Oymak; Dilek Ince; Suna Emir; Deniz Tugcu; Gulcihan Ozek; Ali Bay; Funda Tayfun Kupesiz; Sema Vural; Suheyla Ocak; Yöntem Yaman; Yavuz Koksal; Cetin Timur; Selma Unal; Canan Vergin
1 Coates AS, Winer EP, Goldhirsch A, et al. Tailoring therapies—improving the management of early breast cancer: St Gallen international expert consensus on the primary therapy of early breast cancer 2015. Ann Oncol 2015; 26: 1533–46. 2 Abdel-Fatah TMA, Agarwal D, Liu D-X, et al. SPAG5 as a prognostic biomarker and chemotherapy sensitivity predictor in breast cancer: a retrospective, integrated genomic, transcriptomic, and protein analysis. Lancet Oncol 2016; published online June 13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/ S1470-2045(16)00174-1. 3 Johansson I, Ringner M, Hedenfalk I. The landscape of candidate driver genes diff ers between male and female breast cancer. PLoS One 2013; 8: e78299. 4 Cornen S, Guille A, Adelaide J, et al. Candidate target genes of luminal B breast cancers identifi ed by genome, gene expression and DNA methylation profi ling. PLoS One 2014; 9: e81843. 5 Finetti P, Guille A, Adelaide J, Birnbaum D, Chaff anet M, Bertucci F. ESPL1 is a candidate oncogene of luminal B breast cancers. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2014; 147: 51–59. 6 Paik S, Shak S, Tang G, et al. A multigene assay to predict recurrence of tamoxifen-treated, node-negative breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2004; 351: 2817–26. 7 van de Vijver MJ, He YD, van’t Veer LJ, et al. A gene-expression signature as a predictor of survival in breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2002; 347: 1999–2009. 8 Filipits M, Rudas M, Jakesz R, et al. A new molecular predictor of distant recurrence in ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer adds independent information to conventional clinical risk factors. Clin Cancer Res 2011; 17: 6012–20. 9 Parker JS, Mullins M, Cheang MC, et al. Supervised risk predictor of breast cancer based on intrinsic subtypes. J Clin Oncol 2009; 27: 1160–67. 10 Fischer M, Quaas M, Steiner L, Engeland K. The p53-p21-DREAM-CDE/CHR pathway regulates G2/M cell cycle genes. Nucleic Acids Res 2016; 44: 164–74.
Pediatric Hematology and Oncology | 2012
Deniz Tugcu; Ferhan Akici; Gonul Aydogan; Zafer Şalcıoğlu; Arzu Akcay; Hulya Sayilan Sen; Fulya Yaman Agaoglu; Emin Darendeliler; Yasemin Ozluk
Diagnosis of secondary malignancies began with the increasing survival in childhood cancer. Children treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have an increased risk for developing mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC) of the parotid gland. The latent period ranges from 5 to 16 years. A 2 6/12-year-old girl was treated for pro-B ALL. Treatment included multidrug chemotherapy, prophylactic intrathecal methotrexate, and cranial radiotherapy. MEC of the left parotid gland was diagnosed at the age of 8 years, 3 years after completing treatment. She was treated with multiple surgery and radiotherapy. The authors aimed to emphasize the need for concern about second cancers of the parotid gland in children treated for ALL.
Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2015
Deniz Tugcu; Zafer Salcioglu; Arzu Akcay; Hulya Sayilan Sen; Gonul Aydogan; Ferhan Akici; Gonca Keskindemirci; Nuray Aktay Ayaz; Zafer Baslar
BackgroundRare factor deficiencies (RFDs) are autosomal recessively inherited coagulation factor deficiencies encountered at a frequency of between one in 500 000 and one in two million. Materials and methodsOne hundred and ninety-two patients, diagnosed as having RFD, followed and treated in our clinic between 1990 and 2013 were retrospectively evaluated in this study. ResultsFrom the 192 patients, 142 had FVII, 15 had FX, 14 had FXI, 10 had fibrinogen, six had FV, two had FXIII, two had FV + FVIII and one had FII deficiency. One hundred and thirty of the cases were boys and 62 were girls. The age range was 2 weeks to 24 years and the ages at the admission were between 2 weeks and 16 years. The rate of consanguinity was 49.4%. Eighty-eight of our patients were asymptomatic (45.8%) and 104 were symptomatic (54.2%). Asymptomatic patients were diagnosed by family histories (39.8%), preoperative laboratory studies (54.6%) and operational bleeding (5.6%). Sixty-eight of our symptomatic patients displayed grade II (65.4%) and 36 displayed grade III bleeding symptoms (34.6%). First bleeding regions were skin (33%), nose (28%), central nervous system (CNS) (15.5%), oral cavity (10.5%), soft tissue (6%), joint (3%), urinary system (2%) and gastrointestinal system (GIS) (2%), respectively. The bleeding prevalence rates of our symptomatic patients are listed as epistaxis 62.5%, skin bleedings 53%, oral cavity bleeding 28.8%, haematomas 18.3%, CNS bleedings 17.3%, haemarthrosis 14.4%, GIS bleedings 3.8%, menorrhagia 2.9%, haematuria 1.9%, bleeding because of operations 1.9% and iliopsoas bleedings 1.9%. CNS bleedings (41%) take the first place among the serious bleedings of our cases, followed by haemarthrosis (36.4%), GIS bleedings (18.1%) and iliopsoas bleedings (4.5%). Prophylaxy was applied to nine patients (five patients with FVII, two patients with fibrinogen and one each with FV and FX deficiency). ConclusionsThe characteristics of clinical presentations, first bleeding attacks, bleeding prevalence and severe bleedings as well as prophylactic approaches are discussed in this article.