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International Journal of Surgery | 2016

The SCARE Statement: Consensus-based surgical case report guidelines

Riaz A. Agha; Alexander J. Fowler; Alexandra Saeta; Ishani Barai; Shivanchan Rajmohan; Dennis P. Orgill; Raafat Yahia Afifi; Raha Al-Ahmadi; Joerg Albrecht; Abdulrahman Alsawadi; Jeffrey Aronson; M. Hammad Ather; Mohammad Bashashati; Somprakas Basu; Patrick J. Bradley; Mushtaq Chalkoo; Ben Challacombe; Trent Cross; Laura Derbyshire; Naheed Farooq; Jerome R. Hoffman; Huseyin Kadioglu; Veeru Kasivisvanathan; Boris Kirshtein; Roberto Klappenbach; Daniel M. Laskin; Diana Miguel; James Milburn; Seyed Reza Mousavi; Oliver J. Muensterer

INTRODUCTION Case reports have been a long held tradition within the surgical literature. Reporting guidelines can improve transparency and reporting quality. However, recent consensus-based guidelines for case reports (CARE) are not surgically focused. Our objective was to develop surgical case report guidelines. METHODS The CARE statement was used as the basis for a Delphi consensus. The Delphi questionnaire was administered via Google Forms and conducted using standard Delphi methodology. A multidisciplinary group of surgeons and others with expertise in the reporting of case reports were invited to participate. In round one, participants stated how each item of the CARE statement should be changed and what additional items were needed. Revised and additional items from round one were put forward into a further round, where participants voted on the extent of their agreement with each item, using a nine-point Likert scale, as proposed by the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) working group. RESULTS In round one, there was a 64% (38/59) response rate. Following adjustment of the guideline with the incorporation of recommended changes, round two commenced and there was an 83% (49/59) response rate. All but one of the items were approved by the participants, with Likert scores 7-9 awarded by >70% of respondents. The final guideline consists of a 14-item checklist. CONCLUSION We present the SCARE Guideline, consisting of a 14-item checklist that will improve the reporting quality of surgical case reports.


International Journal of Surgery | 2017

The STROCSS statement: Strengthening the Reporting of Cohort Studies in Surgery

Riaz A. Agha; Mimi R. Borrelli; Martinique Vella-Baldacchino; Rachel Thavayogan; Dennis P. Orgill; Duilio Pagano; Prathamesh. S. Pai; Somprakas Basu; Jim McCaul; Frederick H. Millham; Baskaran Vasudevan; Cláudio Rodrigues Leles; Richard David Rosin; Roberto Klappenbach; David Machado-Aranda; Benjamin Perakath; Andrew J. Beamish; Mangesh A. Thorat; M. Hammad Ather; Naheed Farooq; Daniel M. Laskin; Kandiah Raveendran; Joerg Albrecht; James Milburn; Diana Miguel; Indraneil Mukherjee; James Ngu; Boris Kirshtein; Nicholas Raison; Michael Jennings Boscoe

INTRODUCTION The development of reporting guidelines over the past 20 years represents a major advance in scholarly publishing with recent evidence showing positive impacts. Whilst over 350 reporting guidelines exist, there are few that are specific to surgery. Here we describe the development of the STROCSS guideline (Strengthening the Reporting of Cohort Studies in Surgery). METHODS AND ANALYSIS We published our protocol apriori. Current guidelines for case series (PROCESS), cohort studies (STROBE) and randomised controlled trials (CONSORT) were analysed to compile a list of items which were used as baseline material for developing a suitable checklist for surgical cohort guidelines. These were then put forward in a Delphi consensus exercise to an expert panel of 74 surgeons and academics via Google Forms. RESULTS The Delphi exercise was completed by 62% (46/74) of the participants. All the items were passed in a single round to create a STROCSS guideline consisting of 17 items. CONCLUSION We present the STROCSS guideline for surgical cohort, cross-sectional and case-control studies consisting of a 17-item checklist. We hope its use will increase the transparency and reporting quality of such studies. This guideline is also suitable for cross-sectional and case control studies. We encourage authors, reviewers, journal editors and publishers to adopt these guidelines.


International Journal of Surgery | 2016

Preferred reporting of case series in surgery; the PROCESS guidelines

Riaz A. Agha; Alexander J. Fowler; Shivanchan Rajmohan; Ishani Barai; Dennis P. Orgill; Raafat Yahia Afifi; Raha Al-Ahmadi; Joerg Albrecht; Abdulrahman Alsawadi; Jeffrey Aronson; M. Hammad Ather; Mohammad Bashashati; Somprakas Basu; Patrick J. Bradley; Mushtaq Chalkoo; Ben Challacombe; Trent Cross; Laura Derbyshire; Naheed Farooq; Jerome R. Hoffman; Huseyin Kadioglu; Veeru Kasivisvanathan; Boris Kirshtein; Roberto Klappenbach; Daniel M. Laskin; Diana Miguel; James Milburn; Oliver J. Muensterer; James Ngu; Iain J. Nixon

INTRODUCTION Case series have been a long held tradition within the surgical literature and are still frequently published. Reporting guidelines can improve transparency and reporting quality. No guideline exists for reporting case series, and our recent systematic review highlights the fact that key data are being missed from such reports. Our objective was to develop reporting guidelines for surgical case series. METHODS A Delphi consensus exercise was conducted to determine items to include in the reporting guideline. Items included those identified from a previous systematic review on case series and those included in the SCARE Guidelines for case reports. The Delphi questionnaire was administered via Google Forms and conducted using standard Delphi methodology. Surgeons and others with expertise in the reporting of case series were invited to participate. In round one, participants voted to define case series and also what elements should be included in them. In round two, participants voted on what items to include in the PROCESS guideline using a nine-point Likert scale to assess agreement as proposed by the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) working group. RESULTS In round one, there was a 49% (29/59) response rate. Following adjustment of the guideline with incorporation of recommended changes, round two commenced and there was an 81% (48/59) response rate. All but one of the items were approved by the participants and Likert scores 7-9 were awarded by >70% of respondents. The final guideline consists of an eight item checklist. CONCLUSION We present the PROCESS Guideline, consisting of an eight item checklist that will improve the reporting quality of surgical case series. We encourage authors, reviewers, editors, journals, publishers and the wider surgical and scholarly community to adopt these.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2007

FOXA1 expression in breast cancer- : Correlation with luminal subtype A and survival

Sunil Badve; Dmitry Turbin; Mangesh A. Thorat; Akira Morimiya; Torsten O. Nielsen; Charles M. Perou; Sandi Dunn; David Huntsman; Harikrishna Nakshatri

Purpose: FOXA1, a forkhead family transcription factor, is essential for optimum expression of ∼50% of estrogen receptor α (ERα):estrogen responsive genes. FOXA1 is expressed in breast cancer cells. It segregates with genes that characterize the luminal subtypes in DNA microarray analyses. The utility of FOXA1 as a possible independent prognostic factor has not been determined in breast cancers. Materials and Methods: A tissue microarray comprising tumors from 438 patients with 15.4 years median follow-up was analyzed for FOXA1 expression by immunohistochemistry. Interpretable FOXA1 expression obtained in 404 patients was analyzed along with other prognostic factors like tumor grade, size, nodal status, ER, progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2/neu. Results: FOXA1 expression (score >3) was seen in 300 of 404 breast cancers and it correlated with ER (P = 0.000001), PR (P = 0.00001), and luminal A subtype (P = 0.000001). Loss of expression was noted with worsening tumor grade (P = 0.001). Univariate analysis showed nodal status (P = 0.0000012), tumor size (P = 0.00001), FOXA1 (P = 0.0004), and ER (P = 0.012) to be predictors of breast cancer–specific survival. Multivariate analysis showed only nodal status (P = 0.001) and tumor size (P = 0.039) to be significant prognostic factors, whereas FOXA1 (P = 0.060) and ER (P = 0.131) were not significant. In luminal subtype A patient subgroup, FOXA1 expression was associated with better cancer-specific survival (P = 0.024) and in ER-positive subgroup, it was better predictor of cancer-specific survival (P = 0.009) than PR (P = 0.213). Conclusion: FOXA1 expression correlates with luminal subtype A breast cancer and it is significant predictor of cancer-specific survival in patients with ER-positive tumors. Prognostic ability of FOXA1 in these low-risk breast cancers may prove to be useful in clinical treatment decisions.


Annals of Oncology | 2015

Estimates of benefits and harms of prophylactic use of aspirin in the general population

Jack Cuzick; Mangesh A. Thorat; Cristina Bosetti; Powel H. Brown; John Burn; N. R. Cook; Leslie G. Ford; E. J. Jacobs; Janusz Jankowski; C. La Vecchia; M. Law; Frank L. Meyskens; Peter M. Rothwell; H.-J. Senn; Asad Umar

Accumulating evidence supports an effect of aspirin in reducing cancer incidence and mortality. Our analyses show that prophylactic aspirin use for a minimum of 5 years at doses between 75 and 325 mg/day appears to have favourable benefit–harm profile; longer use is likely to have greater benefits. Further research is needed to determine the optimum dose and duration of use.BACKGROUND Accumulating evidence supports an effect of aspirin in reducing overall cancer incidence and mortality in the general population. We reviewed current data and assessed the benefits and harms of prophylactic use of aspirin in the general population. METHODS The effect of aspirin for site-specific cancer incidence and mortality, cardiovascular events was collated from the most recent systematic reviews. Studies identified through systematic Medline search provided data regarding harmful effects of aspirin and baseline rates of harms like gastrointestinal bleeding and peptic ulcer. RESULTS The effects of aspirin on cancer are not apparent until at least 3 years after the start of use, and some benefits are sustained for several years after cessation in long-term users. No differences between low and standard doses of aspirin are observed, but there were no direct comparisons. Higher doses do not appear to confer additional benefit but increase toxicities. Excess bleeding is the most important harm associated with aspirin use, and its risk and fatality rate increases with age. For average-risk individuals aged 50-65 years taking aspirin for 10 years, there would be a relative reduction of between 7% (women) and 9% (men) in the number of cancer, myocardial infarction or stroke events over a 15-year period and an overall 4% relative reduction in all deaths over a 20-year period. CONCLUSIONS Prophylactic aspirin use for a minimum of 5 years at doses between 75 and 325mg/day appears to have favourable benefit-harm profile; longer use is likely to have greater benefits. Further research is needed to determine the optimum dose and duration of use, to identify individuals at increased risk of bleeding, and to test effectiveness of Helicobacter pylori screening-eradication before starting aspirin prophylaxis.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2010

Prognostic impact of ALDH1 in breast cancer: a story of stem cells and tumor microenvironment

Erika Resetkova; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Rohit K. Jain; Rutika Mehta; Mangesh A. Thorat; Harikrishna Nakshatri; Sunil Badve

The concept of cancer cells being hierarchically organized and arising from their own progenitor stem cells will have important implications on cancer therapy. If this hypothesis were to be true then the paucity of estrogen receptors in stem cells as well as their inherent drug resistance mechanisms pose a challenge to current targeted therapies. In this study, we sought to examine the prognostic relevance of ALDH1, a putative cancer stem cell marker, by immunohistochemistry. The four cohorts analyzed included an adjuvantly treated series of 245 invasive cancers, a neoadjuvantly treated series of 34 cases, and two series of 58 and 40 triple negative cases, respectively. Both tumor cell and stromal expression for ALDH1 was evaluated, where possible. Tumor cell ALDH1 expression significantly correlated only with basal-like and HER2 tumor types in the adjuvant series and tumor grade in the neoadjuvant cohort. No significant enrichment for ALDH1 positive cells was observed in the postneoadjuvant therapy specimens compared to pretreatment samples. On the other hand, high degree of stromal expression was significantly associated with best disease-free survival as well as a trend for overall survival. The association of stromal expression was confirmed in an independent cohort of triple negative cases. The novel finding is that tumor microenvironment may play a significant role in determining the prognostic impact of stem/progenitor cells in human breast tumors.


Lancet Oncology | 2014

Prevention and early detection of prostate cancer

Jack Cuzick; Mangesh A. Thorat; Gerald L. Andriole; Otis W. Brawley; Powel H. Brown; Zoran Culig; Rosalind Eeles; Leslie G. Ford; Freddie C. Hamdy; Lars Holmberg; Dragan Ilic; Timothy J. Key; Carlo La Vecchia; Hans Lilja; Michael Marberger; Frank L. Meyskens; Lori M. Minasian; Chris Parker; Howard L. Parnes; Sven Perner; Harry G. Rittenhouse; Jack A. Schalken; Hans Peter Schmid; Bernd J. Schmitz-Dräger; Fritz H. Schröder; Arnulf Stenzl; Bertrand Tombal; Timothy J Wilt; Alicja Wolk

Prostate cancer is a common malignancy in men and the worldwide burden of this disease is rising. Lifestyle modifications such as smoking cessation, exercise, and weight control offer opportunities to reduce the risk of developing prostate cancer. Early detection of prostate cancer by prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening is controversial, but changes in the PSA threshold, frequency of screening, and the use of other biomarkers have the potential to minimise the overdiagnosis associated with PSA screening. Several new biomarkers for individuals with raised PSA concentrations or those diagnosed with prostate cancer are likely to identify individuals who can be spared aggressive treatment. Several pharmacological agents such as 5α-reductase inhibitors and aspirin could prevent development of prostate cancer. In this Review, we discuss the present evidence and research questions regarding prevention, early detection of prostate cancer, and management of men either at high risk of prostate cancer or diagnosed with low-grade prostate cancer.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2007

Forkhead box A1 expression in breast cancer is associated with luminal subtype and good prognosis

Mangesh A. Thorat; Caterina Marchiò; Akira Morimiya; Kay Savage; Harikrishna Nakshatri; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Sunil Badve

Aims: Forkhead box A1 (FOXA1) is a forkhead family transcription factor expressed in breast cancer cells. It is essential for optimal expression of ∼50% of oestrogen receptor (ER)-related genes. This study explored the FOXA1 relationship with luminal and basal breast cancer subtypes, proliferation markers, and survival in breast cancer patients who had received similar treatment. Methods: A tissue microarray comprising tumours from 245 invasive breast cancer patients with 67 months of median follow-up was analysed for FOXA1 expression by immunohistochemistry. Interpretable FOXA1 expression, obtained in 184 patients, was analysed along with other variables such as tumour grade, size, nodal status, ER, progesterone receptor, HER2/neu, proliferation and basal markers. Results: FOXA1 expression (score >3) was seen in 139 of 184 breast cancers. It correlated positively with ERα (p<0.0001), progesterone receptor (p<0.0001), and luminal subtype (p<0.0001); negatively with basal subtype (p<0.0001), proliferation markers and high histological grade (p = 0.0327). Univariate analysis showed nodal status, tumour grade, ER, progesterone receptor, FOXA1, basal markers and p53 as significant predictors of overall survival. Multivariate analysis showed that only nodal status (p = 0.0006) and ER (p = 0.0017) were significant predictors of OS. In luminal subtype patient subgroup, FOXA1 expression was associated with better survival (p = 0.0284) on univariate analysis. Conclusion: Based on this study in patients treated with surgery followed by adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy, FOXA1 expression is associated with good prognosis. It correlates with luminal subtype breast cancer, and could possibly serve as a clinical marker for luminal subtype A. Prognostic ability of FOXA1 in these low-risk breast cancers may prove to be useful in treatment decision making.


Disease Markers | 2011

Absolute Quantitation of DNA Methylation of 28 Candidate Genes in Prostate Cancer Using Pyrosequencing

Nataöa Vasiljević; Keqiang Wu; Adam R. Brentnall; Dae Cheol Kim; Mangesh A. Thorat; Sakunthala C. Kudahetti; Xueying Mao; Liyan Xue; Yongwei Yu; Greg Shaw; Luis Beltran; Yong-Jie Lu; Daniel M. Berney; Jack Cuzick; Attila T. Lorincz

Aberrant DNA methylation plays a pivotal role in carcinogenesis and its mapping is likely to provide biomarkers for improved diagnostic and risk assessment in prostate cancer (PCa). We quantified and compared absolute methylation levels among 28 candidate genes in 48 PCa and 29 benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) samples using the pyrosequencing (PSQ) method to identify genes with diagnostic and prognostic potential. RARB, HIN1, BCL2, GSTP1, CCND2, EGFR5, APC, RASSF1A, MDR1, NKX2-5, CDH13, DPYS, PTGS2, EDNRB, MAL, PDLIM4, HLAa, ESR1 and TIG1 were highly methylated in PCa compared to BPH (p < 0.001), while SERPINB5, CDH1, TWIST1, DAPK1, THRB, MCAM, SLIT2, CDKN2a and SFN were not. RARB methylation above 21% completely distinguished PCa from BPH. Separation based on methylation level of SFN, SLIT2 and SERPINB5 distinguished low and high Gleason score cancers, e.g. SFN and SERPINB5 together correctly classified 81% and 77% of high and low Gleason score cancers respectively. Several genes including CDH1 previously reported as methylation markers in PCa were not confirmed in our study. Increasing age was positively associated with gene methylation (p < 0.0001). Accurate quantitative measurement of gene methylation in PCa appears promising and further validation of genes like RARB, HIN1, BCL2, APC and GSTP1 is warranted for diagnostic potential and SFN, SLIT2 and SERPINB5 for prognostic potential.


Modern Pathology | 2010

Expression of Forkhead-box protein A1, a marker of luminal A type breast cancer, parallels low Oncotype DX 21-gene recurrence scores

Foluso O. Ademuyiwa; Mangesh A. Thorat; Rohit K. Jain; Harikrishna Nakshatri; Sunil Badve

The Oncotype DX assay is one of the molecular tests that provide predictive and prognostic information to breast cancer patients with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and node-negative disease. This study evaluates the association of Forkhead-box protein A1 (FOXA1) and GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3) expressions with Oncotype DX recurrences scores in 77 cases of patients with ER-positive node-negative breast carcinomas diagnosed at Indiana University. The data were correlated with patient age, tumor size, histologic type, Scarff–Bloom–Richardson score, histologic grade, and progesterone receptor status. The median FOXA1 and GATA3 scores were 240 and 200, respectively. The Oncotype DX recurrence scores were low in 57%, intermediate in 30%, and high in 13% of cases. FOXA1 expression correlated negatively with Oncotype DX recurrence scores (P=0.004), and histologic type (P=0.0004). Oncotype DX recurrences score also correlated negatively with progesterone receptor (P=0.035) with 100% of progesterone receptor-negative cases having high or intermediate Oncotype DX scores. FOXA1 and GATA3 expressions correlated positively (P=0.014). The correlation between FOXA1 expression and Oncotype DX recurrence scores remained significant after adjusting for multiple comparisons and controlling for confounders such as histological type, grade, and progesterone receptor. A statistically significant correlation between the Oncotype DX recurrence scores and FOXA1 expression in our diverse cohort of ER-positive breast cancer patients was observed. We propose that this may represent a more cost-effective strategy to further risk stratify patients with good prognosis in whom chemotherapy may be omitted. To confirm these findings, further studies in a larger cohort of patients are warranted.

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Jack Cuzick

Queen Mary University of London

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Harikrishna Nakshatri

Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis

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Riaz A. Agha

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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Daniel M. Laskin

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Dennis P. Orgill

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Abdulrahman Alsawadi

Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust

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Ben Challacombe

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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