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Featured researches published by Nasir Ali.


Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2013

Plan Dose Evaluation of Three Dimensional Conformal Radiotherapy Planning (3D-CRT) of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC): Experience of a Tertiary Care University Hospital in Pakistan

Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Asim Hafiz; Nasir Ali; Khurshid Ahmed Khan

BACKGROUND Radiation therapy is the mainstay of treatment for nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Importance of tumor coverage and challenges posed by its unique and critical location are well evident. Therefore we aimed to evaluate our radiation treatment plan through dose volume histograms (DVHs) to find planning target volume (PTV) dose coverage and factors affecting it. MATERIALS AND METHODS This retrospective study covered 45 histologically proven nasopharyngeal cancer patients who were treated with definitive 3D-CRT and chemotherapy between Feb 2006 to March 2013 at the Department of Oncology, Section Radiation Oncology ,Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan. DVH was evaluated to find numbers of shrinking field (phases), PTV volume in different phases and its coverage by the 95% isodose lines, along with influencing factors. RESULTS There were 36 males (80%) and 9 females (20%) in the age range of 12-84 years. Stage IVA (46.7%) was the most common stage followed by stage III (31.1). Eighty six point six-percent received induction, 95.5% received concurrent and 22.2% received adjuvant chemotherapy. The prescribed median radiation dose was 70Gy to primary, 60Gy to clinically positive neck nodes and 50Gy to clinically negative neck regions. Mean dose to spinal cord was 44.2Gy and to optic chiasma was 52Gy. Thirty seven point eight-percent patients completed their treatment in three phases while 62.2% required four to five phases. Mean volume for PTV3 was 247.8 cm3 (50-644.3), PTV4 173.8 cm3 (26.5-345.1) and PTV5 119.6 cm3 (18.9-246.1) and PTV volume coverage by 95% isodose lines were 74.4%, 85.7% and 100% respectively. Advanced T stage, intracranial extension and tumor volume >200 cm3 were found to be important factors associated with decreased PTV coverage by 95% isodose line. CONCLUSIONS 3D CRT results in adequate PTV dose coverage by 95% isodose line. However advanced T stage, intracranial extension and large target volume require more advanced techniques like IMRT for appropriate PTV coverage.


Journal of obesity and weight loss therapy | 2013

Overweight and Obesity among Medical Students of Public Sector's Institutes in Karachi, Pakistan

Sajid Mahmood; Tahira Perveen; Muhammad Najjad; Naeem Yousuf; Faizan Ahmed; Nasir Ali

Objectives: To determine the factors associated with overweight and obesity among medical students of public sector’s institutes in Karachi, Pakistan. Methodology: A university based cross-sectional analytic study was conducted in public sector institutes of Karachi. Data was collected from first year to final year medical students through convenient sampling technique by using self administered questionnaire followed by anthropometric measurement. The outcome variable “overweight or obesity” was defined by using South Asian BMI (≥ 23) cut-off points. Logistic regression technique was applied by using software SPSS to determine the factors associated with overweight and obesity among medical students. Results: A total of 428 medical students participated in study. Prevalence of overweight and obesity among medical students was found to be 14.7%, 12.4% respectively. Among boys it was 47.7% whereas among girls it was 15.9%. The prevalence of overweight and obesity was associated with male gender (adjusted OR=4.96 (95% C.I: 3.02 - 8.15)), lunch taking from college/outside home (adjusted OR=3.67 (95% C.I: 2.44 - 6.61)), snacks taking habit between the meals (adjusted OR=1.95 (95% C.I: 1.03 - 3.68)), and tea drinking habit (adjusted OR=2.50 (95% C.I: 1.38 - 4.54)). Conclusion: Prevalence of overweight and obesity among medical students was high in our sample population. Multifaceted efforts are required to target this high risk group of medical students to prevent obesity and its related morbidity and mortality.


Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Oncology | 2017

Comment on: Are we training the next generation of proficient Radiation Oncologists, or just better examination candidates?

Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Muneeb Uddin Karim; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi; Asim Hafiz; Nasir Ali

Dear Editor, Our team of residents and faculty of Radiation Oncology, Aga Khan University, have read with interest, your editorial in June 2016 issue. We wish to vouch and acknowledge the comments made by Turner et al. with reference to the Kleiven et al.’s survey. Our team agrees with points made by the authors, but in the context of post graduate training programmes in developing countries, the issue of nurturing a patient centred carer, proficient Radiation Oncologist rather than just an examination candidate becomes more pertinent and detrimental. In the absence of robust regulatory systems pertaining to continuing medical education (CME) and practice privilege documentation after passing the post graduate exit exam, we strongly recommend peer-reviewed, site-specialized Radiation Oncology practice. It may not be as vitally important and detrimental in developed countries with established healthcare systems. We wish to further add to Turner et al.’s comments that more emphasis should be given to the establishment of regular end of term assessments. In our residency programme, we are conducting theory, viva voce and Objectively Structured Assessment of Technical Skills (OSATS) on three-monthly basis and we offer reassessment to all those residents who are not able to secure 60% score in any of the components. The promotion of a resident in the subsequent training year is dependent on his/her success in the annual assessment. We strongly agree with Turner et al. that passing exam should not be considered as the final goal. Radiation Oncology is a very quality conscious discipline of medicine. After passing the exit exam, peerreviewed, site-specialized practice can ensure safety and quality of radiation treatment planning and delivery. We involve our residents in the tasks and assignments of clinical quality indicators and they are active participants of our quality improvement and site-specific multidisciplinary tumour board meetings. We believe and work on pre-defined learning objectives which are helping us in achieving international post graduate training standards. Our programme is regularly reviewed by internal and external audit systems including the JCIA (Joint Commission International Accreditation). In a recent published report, resident’s involvement in quality improvement projects has proven to be beneficial for Radiation Oncology training and service. After passing the examination, robust continued professional development programmes comprising of learning objective-based formal structured processes is the answer to this issue. The Exit examination can be regarded as an important milestone in postgraduate specialist training. However, it cannot be considered as the final destination of a carer who considers himself or herself as a part of multidisciplinary site-specific team. It is a matter of nurturing patient-centred care provider who considers himself or herself as a team member of a site-specialized multidisciplinary team. The inclusion of quality and ethical Radiation Oncology practice should be considered an integral part of structured curriculum and assessment of all Radiation Oncology residency programmes. All the above-mentioned points are equally valid in case of Medical Physics and Radiation Therapy Technologist (RTT) training programmes. Complete professional training before exit exams of all three disciplines is vitally important in both developed and developing countries.


Medical Oncology | 2016

Correspondence on the article: “Patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy + radical surgery + adjuvant chemotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer: long-term outcomes, survival and prognostic factors in a single-center 10-year follow-up”

Nasir Ali; Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Muhammad Atif Mansha

Our team has gone through this article authored by Luvero et al. [1]. Certainly, 10-year follow-up of 90 cervical cancer patients is an impressive long-term follow-up. In this study, authors reported a negative correlation for involved nodes and outcome and also mentioned that site of involved nodes is not related to survival. Our team is inclined to disagree with this statement. In one study by Kidd et al. [2], it was reported that on PET/CT imaging the more distant level of nodal involvement was associated with poor survival. In another study by Paumier et al. [3], three-year survival was 58 and 24 % in patients without and with paraaortic lymph node involvement, respectively. These patients were staged by PET/CT. It is reported in this series that patients with parametrial invasion had poor survival as compared to those without parametrial invasion. It is understandable that in these patients local failure remains a major problem if not offered adjuvant chemoradiotherapy. We do agree with authors that systemic relapse remains a major challenge, and to cope with this issue various ongoing clinical trials are investigating the role of adjuvant chemotherapy. Internationally accepted standard of care for the management of locally advanced cervical cancer is concurrent chemoradiotherapy, but authors have not mentioned the selection criteria of offering chemotherapy and surgery followed by chemotherapy. There are evidences in the literature published on this issue in favor of chemoradiation therapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy [4]. Overall survival reported in this study is almost the same as reported in contemporary chemoradiation therapy series. Seventy percentage of patients in this series were having tumor size less than 4 cm and probably could be assigned as having low risk of distant metastases and were in any case candidates for surgery [1]. We would request the authors to consider sharing their exclusion and inclusion criteria which they have adopted in this study. This information would help us and other readers in drawing meaningful inferences from this commendable effort.


Jcpsp-journal of The College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan | 2009

A case of pseudotumorous form of ascaris.

Iram Bokhari; Nawaid Farooque Khan; Qurrat-ul-Ain Tahir; Nasir Ali; Asadullah Khan

A 35-year-old woman presented with lower abdominal pain and amenorrhoea. CT showed a thick walled lobulated mass with Ascaris adjacent to caecum along with the presence of a left ovarian mass. The peroperative findings were a tubular mass with central tunneling containing an Ascaris lumbricoides. Left ovary showed a haemorrhagic cyst. Biopsy of the mass showed acute on chronic granulomatous inflammation and the worm was found to be female. This was a rare case of Ascaris lumbricoides presenting as a pseudotumorous mass.


Journal of Global Oncology | 2018

Chemoradiation and the Role of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Lymph Nodal–Metastatic Cervical Cancer

Nasir Ali; Azmina Tajdin Valimohammad; Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Muhammad Mansha; Asim Hafiz; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi

Purpose To report the long-term outcome in lymph nodal–metastatic cervical squamous cell cancer after chemoradiation followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Patients and Methods Between 2010 and 2013, five patients were diagnosed with advanced cervical cancer with clinically involved para-aortic lymph nodes (ie, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage IVB). These patients were treated with concurrent chemoradiation therapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Concurrent chemoradiation consisted of cisplatin given once per week concomitantly with extended-field radiation therapy followed by high-dose-rate brachytherapy. Adjuvant chemotherapy comprised four courses of carboplatin and paclitaxel given every three weeks. The primary outcomes were local and distant failures. Results None of the patients had local recurrence or distal failure after a minimum follow-up time of 3 years. Conclusion Adjuvant chemotherapy after chemoradiation has a probable role in the management of lymph nodal–metastatic cervical cancer.


Cureus | 2018

Hidradenocarcinoma: Five Years of Local and Systemic Control of a Rare Sweat Gland Neoplasm with Nodal Metastasis

Benazir Mir Khan; Muhammad Mansha; Nasir Ali; Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Syed Mustajab Ahmed; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi

Hidradenocarcinoma is a rare and locally aggressive tumor rendering a poor prognosis. Furthermore, very few cases present with nodal metastasis. Diagnosing such an entity, and then differentiating it from a benign counterpart, poses a great challenge to the clinicians. There are no established treatment guidelines for the management of this disease, particularly in patients with nodal involvement. We present a case of a young male who was diagnosed with hidradenocarcinoma of the scalp, along with a neck swelling. A thorough diagnostic evaluation was done with endoscopy, pathological, and radiological investigations. He was successfully treated with resection of the scalp lesion and right-sided neck dissection followed by adjuvant concurrent chemoradiation. He remains free of any local and distant disease after five years of regular follow-up.


Case Reports | 2018

Extramedullary plasmacytoma: rare neoplasm of parotid gland

Sehrish Abrar; Nasir Ali; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi; Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi

A 45-year-old man presented with left-sided facial swelling. Initial excisional biopsy was done somewhere else without prior imaging and it came out to be pleomorphic adenoma; local imaging after biopsy showed mass over the left parotid gland with ipsilateral lymphadenopathy. On examination, there was a well-circumscribed mass with signs of left facial nerve palsy. He underwent left radical parotidectomy with ipsilateral modified radical neck dissection, and per operatively, it came out to be neoplastic lesion. Final histopathology was plasma cell neoplasm of the parotid gland. After surgery, the patient received radiation therapy to the left parotid region on account of uncertain surgical margins. It has been 3 years down the road that there is no evidence of local recurrence or transformation into multiple myeloma. Available evidence reveals that mere surgery for extramedullary plasmacytoma is not enough for local control whenever there is doubt of residual disease consider radiation therapy.


Clinical Oncology | 2017

Postgraduate Training in a Low- and Middle-income Country: Sharing Experience from a Joint Commission International Accreditation-accredited University Hospital

Muneeb Uddin Karim; A. Nadeem Abbasi; Nasir Ali; Asim Hafiz; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi; B. Mir

Madam d Our team of residents and faculty of radiation oncology, Aga Khan University, read the article published in your journal with interest [1]. Pakistan, like other lowand middle-income (LMI) countries, needs modern equipment and trained professionals [2]. We are working in a tertiary referral university hospital and our programme is regularly reviewed by internal and external audit systems, including the Joint Commission International Accreditation (JCIA). We are continuously taking steps through audits for training evaluation [3]. Radiation oncology is a quality conscious discipline. Doctors, physicists and radiation therapy technologists (RTT) are integral and crucial components of this service. However, like many countries, in Pakistan they are not getting the deserved recognition as health care providers. In the absence of robust regulatory systems pertaining to continuing medical education and practice privilege documentation, we strongly recommend peer-reviewed, sitespecialised practice [4]. We involve our postgraduates in quality initiatives, like clinical quality indicators, and they are active participants of site-specific tumour boards [5]. We believe and work on pre-defined learning objectives, which are helping us to achieve international postgraduate training standards. We have developed our syllabus as recommended by the International Atomic Energy Agency for LMI countries [6]. We are carrying out end of term briefing sessions to review the progress of structured training. In order to overcome a shortage of qualified teachers in our country, monthly activities are organised for all trainees in the city, in which learning objective-based interactive learning sessions are conducted by qualified faculty of radiation (oncologist/physicist) on a voluntary basis. This strategy is also helping us to develop collegiality among colleagues of other cancer units. Regular web-based sessions from qualified foreign consultants are also part of this


Case Reports | 2017

Role of metastasectomy and chemotherapy in carcinoma of uterine cervix

Nasir Ali; Muhammad Atif Mansha; Ahmed Nadeem Abbasi; Bilal Mazhar Qureshi

Squamous cell carcinoma of uterine cervix is potentially a curable disease; however, many patients treated with definitive chemoradiotherapy develop distant metastases, with few of them having a single metastatic deposit. There are no guidelines for the treatment of patients with oligometastatic cervical cancer. We present a case of a patient with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) Stage IIB squamous cell carcinoma of uterine cervix. She was successfully treated with concurrent chemoradiotherapy with definitive intent. One year later, she developed a solitary pulmonary nodule for which she underwent resection followed by chemotherapy. She is free of any local or distant disease at 5 years of regular follow-up.

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Asim Hafiz

Aga Khan University Hospital

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Muneeb Uddin Karim

Aga Khan University Hospital

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Amjad Hussain

Aga Khan University Hospital

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Mubasher Ikram

Aga Khan University Hospital

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Muhammad Mansha

Innsbruck Medical University

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A. Nadeem Abbasi

Aga Khan University Hospital

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