Janice G. Rothschild
Tufts Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Janice G. Rothschild.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990
William J. Casarella; R. Carter Davis; Harvey V. Steinberg; William E. Torres; Leslie J. Schoenfield; George Berci; Shelly C. Lu; Jay W. Marks; James W. Maher; Robert W. Summers; David L. Nahrwold; Albert A. Nemcek; A. Cedrick Johnson; Lee G. Jordan; Dean D. T. Maglinte; Igor Laufer; Peter F. Malet; Ronald A. Malt; Randolph B. Reinhold; Janice G. Rothschild; Richard L. Carnovale; Delbert Chumley; Arthur Rosenthal; Jay Y. Gillenwater; R. Scott Jones; Richard W. McCallum; Daniel J. Pambianco; Bruce D. Schirmer; Pam Caslowitz; David R. Kafonek
BACKGROUND In the treatment of gallstones with extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy, the bile acid ursodiol is administered to dissolve the gallstone fragments. We designed our study to determine the value of administering this agent. METHODS At 10 centers, 600 symptomatic patients with three or fewer radiolucent gallstones 5 to 30 mm in diameter, as visualized by oral cholecystography, were randomly assigned to receive ursodiol or placebo for six months, starting one week before lithotripsy. RESULTS The stones were fragmented in 97 percent of all patients, and the fragments were less than or equal to 5 mm in diameter in 46.8 percent. On the basis of an intention-to-treat analysis of all 600 patients, 21 percent receiving ursodiol and 9 percent receiving placebo (P less than 0.0001) had gallbladders that were free of stones after six months. Among those with completely radiolucent solitary stones less than 20 mm in diameter, 35 percent of the patients receiving ursodiol and 18 percent of those receiving placebo (P less than 0.001) were free of stones after six months. Biliary pain, usually mild, occurred in 73 percent of all patients but in only 13 percent of those who were free of stones after three and six months (P less than 0.01). There were few adverse events. Only diarrhea occurred with a significantly different frequency in the two groups: 32.6 percent were affected in the ursodiol group, as compared with 24.7 percent in the placebo group (P less than 0.04). Severe biliary pain occurred in 1.5 percent of all patients, acute cholecystitis in 1.0 percent, and acute pancreatitis in 1.5 percent; endoscopic sphincterotomy was performed in 0.5 percent, and cholecystectomy in 2.5 percent. CONCLUSIONS Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy with ursodiol was more effective than lithotripsy alone for the treatment of symptomatic gallstones, and equally safe. Treatment was more effective for solitary than multiple stones, radiolucent than slightly calcified stones, and smaller than larger stones.
American Journal of Surgery | 1989
Ronald A. Malt; Janice G. Rothschild; Ryan F. Holbrook; Peter R. Mueller; J F Simeone; William B. Latta; William R. Kimball; Randolph B. Reinhold
After the success of shock-wave therapy for fragmentation of renal stones, machines for shock-wave therapy of gallbladder stones were quick to follow. In Munich, gallstones were successfully treated in 174 of 175 patients who were also taking ursodiol to help solubilize the calculous rubble left after treatment. In Boston, of the initial 87 patients accepted, 58 were treated for a single stone (mean diameter 15.7 mm), 16 were treated for 2 stones, and 13 for 3 stones. Although reporting of exact results is not possible before the Food and Drug Administration issues a clearance, it is fair to say that both patients and physicians are generally pleased with the results.
Journal of the Pancreas | 2013
Chakra P. Chaulagain; Janice G. Rothschild; Muhammad Wasif Saif
There remains a lack of consensus on the optimal adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer. In general, chemoradiation is favored in the United States and gemcitabine based chemotherapy is favored in Europe. Both of these approaches have been shown by large prospective, randomized trials to improve disease free survivals and in some studies overall survival. We present the summary of three abstracts from the 2013 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting and discuss their potential impact on our clinical practice. Adjuvant oral chemotherapy with S-1 (Fukutomi et al., Abstract #4008) has now emerged as a promising alternative to the traditional gold standard of intravenous gemcitabine in a relatively large randomized phase III clinical trial. Another study by Yoshitomi et al. (Abstract #4056) examined the value of adjuvant chemotherapy with S-1 alone versus combination of S-1 and gemcitabine versus gemcitabine alone in a three arm phase II clinical trial (CAP-002 Study). In terms of biomarkers in pancreatic cancer, Neoptolemos et al. presented the impact of hENT1 tumor levels on the outcome of the patients with pancreatic cancer (Abstract #4006) who had received adjuvant chemotherapy with either 5-flurouracil or gemcitabine in the ESPAC trial.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2002
David E. Wazer; Lisa Berle; Roger A. Graham; Maureen Chung; Janice G. Rothschild; Theresa A. Graves; Blake Cady; Kenneth Ulin; Robin Ruthazer; Thomas A. DiPetrillo
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1998
David E. Wazer; Rupert Schmidt-Ullrich; Robin Ruthazer; Christopher H. Schmid; Roger A. Graham; Homa Safaii; Janice G. Rothschild; John J. McGrath; John K. Erban
American Journal of Surgery | 2002
Roger A. Graham; Marc J. Homer; Judith Katz; Janice G. Rothschild; Homa Safaii; Stacey Supran
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2013
Christina J. Wai; Ghada Al-Mubarak; Marc J. Homer; Allison Goldkamp; Marja Samenfeld-Specht; Yoojin Lee; Tanya Logvinenko; Janice G. Rothschild; Roger A. Graham
Archives of Surgery | 1998
Janice G. Rothschild
Archives of Surgery | 1989
Janice G. Rothschild; Marshall M. Kaplan; Victor G. Millan; Randolph B. Reinhold
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2000
Judith Katz; Marc J. Homer; Roger A. Graham; Janice G. Rothschild