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Featured researches published by Sapna Nagar.


Thyroid | 2015

Risk Factors for Decreased Quality of Life in Thyroid Cancer Survivors: Initial Findings from the North American Thyroid Cancer Survivorship Study

Briseis Aschebrook-Kilfoy; Benjamin C. James; Sapna Nagar; Sharone P. Kaplan; Vanessa Seng; Habibul Ahsan; Peter Angelos; Edwin L. Kaplan; Marlon A. Guerrero; Jennifer H. Kuo; James A. Lee; Elliot J. Mitmaker; Jacob Moalem; Daniel T. Ruan; Wen T. Shen; Raymon H. Grogan

BACKGROUND The prevalence of thyroid cancer survivors is rising rapidly due to the combination of an increasing incidence, high survival rates, and a young age at diagnosis. The physical and psychosocial morbidity of thyroid cancer has not been adequately described, and this study therefore sought to improve the understanding of the impact of thyroid cancer on quality of life (QoL) by conducting a large-scale survivorship study. METHODS Thyroid cancer survivors were recruited from a multicenter collaborative network of clinics, national survivorship groups, and social media. Study participants completed a validated QoL assessment tool that measures four morbidity domains: physical, psychological, social, and spiritual effects. Data were also collected on participant demographics, medical comorbidities, tumor characteristics, and treatment modalities. RESULTS A total of 1174 participants with thyroid cancer were recruited. Of these, 89.9% were female, with an average age of 48 years, and a mean time from diagnosis of five years. The mean overall QoL was 5.56/10, with 0 being the worst. Scores for each of the sub-domains were 5.83 for physical, 5.03 for psychological, 6.48 for social, and 5.16 for spiritual well-being. QoL scores begin to improve five years after diagnosis. Female sex, young age at diagnosis, and lower educational attainment were highly predictive of decreased QoL. CONCLUSION Thyroid cancer diagnosis and treatment can result in a decreased QoL. The present findings indicate that better tools to measure and improve thyroid cancer survivor QoL are needed. The authors plan to follow-up on these findings in the near future, as enrollment and data collection are ongoing.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2015

Benign and Malignant Thyroid Incidentalomas are Rare in Routine Clinical Practice: A Review of 97,908 Imaging Studies

Abhineet Uppal; Michael G. White; Sapna Nagar; Briseis Aschebrook-Kilfoy; Paul J. Chang; Peter Angelos; Edwin L. Kaplan; Raymon H. Grogan

Purpose: Thyroid nodules incidentally identified on imaging are thought to contribute to the increasing incidence of thyroid cancer. We aim to determine the true rate of incidental thyroid nodule reporting, malignancy rates of these nodules, and to compare these findings with rates of detection by dedicated radiology review. Methods: A cross-sectional analysis was done to determine the prevalence of thyroid nodules in radiologist reports by analyzing all reports for CT, PET, and MRI scans of the head, neck, and chest as well as neck ultrasounds performed at a tertiary care center from 2007 to 2012. Retrospective chart review was performed on patients with a reported thyroid nodule to determine clinical outcomes of these nodules. Radiology reports were compared with dedicated radiology review of 500 randomly selected CT scans from the study group to determine the difference between clinical reporting and actual prevalence of thyroid nodules. Results: 97,908 imaging studies met inclusion criteria, and 387 (0.4%) thyroid incidentalomas were identified on radiology report. One hundred and sixty three (42.1%) of these nodules were worked up with fine-needle aspiration, diagnosing 27 thyroid cancers (0.03% of all studies, 7.0% of reported incidentalomas). The prevalence of incidentalomas clinically reported was 142/100,000 CT scans, 638/100,000 MRIs, 358/100,000 PET scans, and 6,594/100,000 ultrasounds. In contrast, review of CT scans screening for thyroid nodules had a prevalence of 10%. Conclusion: Routine clinical reporting of incidental thyroid nodules is far less common than on dedicated review. Impact: These data contradict the notion that incidentalomas contribute significantly to rising thyroid cancer rates. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 24(9); 1327–31. ©2015 AACR.


Surgery | 2013

Hurthle cell carcinoma: An update on survival over the last 35 years

Sapna Nagar; Briseis Aschebrook-Kilfoy; Edwin L. Kaplan; Peter Angelos; Raymon H. Grogan

BACKGROUND Hurthle cell carcinoma (HCC) of the thyroid is a variant of follicular cell carcinoma (FCC). A low incidence and lack of long-term follow-up data have caused controversy regarding the survival characteristics of HCC. We aimed to clarify this controversy by analyzing HCC survival over a 35-year period using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. METHODS Cases of HCC and FCC were extracted from the SEER-9 database (1975-2009). Five- and 10-year survival rates were calculated. We compared changes in survival over time by grouping cases into 5-year intervals. RESULTS We identified 1,416 cases of HCC and 4,973 cases of FCC. For cases diagnosed from 1975 to 1979, HCC showed a worse survival compared with FCC (5 years, 75%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 60.2-85) versus 88.7% (95% CI, 86-90.8; 10 years, 66.7% [95% CI, 51.5-78.1] vs. 79.7% [95% CI, 76.5-82.6]). For cases diagnosed from 2000 to 2004 we found no difference in 5-year survival between HCC and FCC (91.1% [95% CI, 87.6-93.7] vs. 89.1% [95% CI, 86.5-91.2]). For cases diagnosed from 1995 to 1999, there was no difference in 10-year survival between HCC and FCC (80.9% [95% CI, 75.6-85.2] vs. 83.9% [95% CI, 80.8-86.6]). HCC survival improved over the study period while FCC survival rates remained stable (increase in survival at 5 years, 21.7% vs. 0.4%; at 10 years, 21.3% vs. 5.2%). Improvement in HCC survival was observed for both genders, in age ≥45 years, in local and regional disease, for tumors >4 cm, and with white race. CONCLUSION HCC survival has improved dramatically over time such that HCC and FCC survival rates are now the same. These findings explain how studies over the last 4 decades have shown conflicting results regarding HCC survival; however, our data do not explain why HCC survival has improved.


Surgery | 2014

A novel, ultrarapid parathyroid hormone assay to distinguish parathyroid from nonparathyroid tissue

Benjamin C. James; Sapna Nagar; Miles Tracy; Edwin L. Kaplan; Peter Angelos; Neal H. Scherberg; Raymon H. Grogan

BACKGROUND Frozen section is the gold standard for distinguishing parathyroid tissue from lymph nodes, thyroid nodules, or fat during parathyroidectomy and thyroidectomy. Although a very accurate procedure, it can be time-consuming and costly. We hypothesize that the extremely high concentrations of parathyroid hormone (PTH) in parathyroid tissue allow for modification of a standard PTH assay that would distinguish parathyroid from nonparathyroid tissue in substantially less time than frozen section or any currently available PTH assay. METHODS A prospective, single-institution study using a modified PTH assay protocol and a manual luminometer was undertaken by testing 20 parathyroid adenomas and 9 control tissues. Analyses were performed simultaneously by the modified PTH protocol and the conventional intraoperative PTH assay. RESULTS PTH luminescence values from parathyroid tissue and control tissue aspirates were significantly different at 60 seconds (P = .015). ROC curve analysis showed the assay to be 100% sensitive and 100% specific in differentiating parathyroid from nonparathyroid tissue. CONCLUSION Our novel PTH assay accurately and reliably differentiates parathyroid from nonparathyroid tissue within 60 seconds of measurement onset. This assay provides a great advantage in time savings compared with frozen section as well as any currently existing PTH assays.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2016

One-hour PTH after thyroidectomy predicts symptomatic hypocalcemia

Michael G. White; Benjamin C. James; Cheryl C. Nocon; Sapna Nagar; Edwin L. Kaplan; Peter Angelos; Raymon H. Grogan

BACKGROUND A major morbidity after total thyroidectomy is hypocalcemia. Although many clinical factors and laboratory studies have been correlated with both biochemical and symptomatic hypocalcemia, the ideal use and timing of these tests remain unclear. We hypothesize 1-h (PACU) parathyroid hormone (PTH) will identify patients at risk for symptomatic hypocalcemia. METHODS This prospective study evaluated 196 patients undergoing total thyroidectomy. Serum calcium and PTH levels were measured 1 h after surgery and on postoperative day 1 (POD1). Performance of a central compartment lymph node dissection, parathyroid autotransplantation, indication for procedure, pathology, and presence of parathyroid tissue in the pathology specimen were recorded. RESULTS Of 196 patients, nine (4.6%) developed symptomatic hypocalcemia. Thirty four (17.3%) had a 1-h PACU PTH ≤10 pg/dL, whereas 31 (15.8%) had a POD1 PTH of ≤10. Five (56%) of the nine symptomatic patients underwent central compartment lymph node dissection, four (44%) had parathyroid autotransplantation, and four (44%) had a PACU PTH ≤10. PACU and POD1 PTH levels were correlated (R(2) = 0.682). Multivariate regression identified central compartment dissection, autotransplantation, and PACU or POD1 PTH correlated with symptomatic hypocalcemia. PACU PTH, POD1 PTH, PACU Ca, malignant final pathology, and age ≤45 y correlated with biochemical hypocalcemia. CONCLUSIONS A 1-h postoperative PACU PTH is equivalent to POD1 PTH in predicting the development of symptomatic hypocalcemia. Biochemical hypocalcemia was not predictive of symptoms in the immediate postoperative period. Lymph node dissection and parathyroid autotransplantation correlated with symptomatic hypocalcemia and improve the sensitivity of biochemical screening alone.


Cancer Causes & Control | 2014

Age of diagnosing physician impacts the incidence of thyroid cancer in a population

Sapna Nagar; Briseis Aschebrook-Kilfoy; Edwin L. Kaplan; Peter Angelos; Raymon H. Grogan

BackgroundThyroid ultrasound and fine-needle aspiration (FNA) have been implicated in the overdiagnosis of thyroid cancer. To study how the use of diagnostic tools impacts thyroid cancer incidence, we propose using physician age as a surrogate. We aimed to determine whether thyroid cancer incidence is higher in areas with a high density of young physicians compared with areas with a high density of older physicians.MethodsSEER 13 database was used to determine thyroid cancer incidence. These data were linked to the Area Resource File data (2000), containing information on physician age at a county-specific level. Cohorts were divided by age based on the concentration of physicians within a population of 1,000,000 persons. The study period was divided into two time periods (1992–1995, 2006–2009).ResultsThe incidence of thyroid cancer was stable in areas with high concentrations of young and older physicians during the 1992–1995 time period [<35: 5.97; 55–64: 6.82; ≥65: 6.70 (per 100,000py)]. Areas with high concentrations of young physicians had an increased incidence of thyroid cancer compared with areas of high concentrations of older physicians during the 2006–2009 period [<35: 13.3; 55–64: 9.86; ≥65: 7.47 (per 100,000py)].ConclusionsThyroid cancer incidence was lower in areas with high concentrations of older physicians. This may be the result of increased adoption of thyroid ultrasound and FNA among younger physicians who have trained after diagnostic tools became common. Age of the diagnosing physician is a surrogate for diagnostic utility contributing to thyroid cancer trends.


Surgery | 2013

A multi-institutional international study of risk factors for hematoma after thyroidectomy

Michael J. Campbell; Kelly L. McCoy; Wen T. Shen; Sally E. Carty; Carrie C. Lubitz; Jacob Moalem; Matthew A. Nehs; Tammy Holm; David Yu Greenblatt; Danielle Press; Xiaoxi Feng; Allan Siperstein; Elliot J. Mitmaker; Cassandre Benay; Roger Tabah; Sarah C. Oltmann; Herbert Chen; Rebecca S. Sippel; Andrew V. Brekke; Menno R. Vriens; Lutske Lodewijk; Antonia E. Stephen; Sapna Nagar; Peter Angelos; Maher Ghanem; Jason D. Prescott; Martha A. Zeiger; Patricia Aragon Han; Cord Sturgeon; Dina M. Elaraj


Surgery | 2014

A novel technique to improve the diagnostic yield of negative sestamibi scans

Sapna Nagar; David D. Walker; Omran M.A. Embia; Edwin L. Kaplan; Raymon H. Grogan; Peter Angelos


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Epigenetic Alterations and Canonical Pathway Disruption in Papillary Thyroid Cancer: A Genome-wide Methylation Analysis.

Michael G. White; Sapna Nagar; Briseis Aschebrook-Kilfoy; Farzana Jasmine; Muhammad G. Kibriya; Habibul Ahsan; Peter Angelos; Edwin L. Kaplan; Raymon H. Grogan


Archive | 2016

Surgery of the Thyroid

Edwin L. Kaplan; Peter Angelos; Benjamin C. James; Sapna Nagar; Raymon H. Grogan

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Jacob Moalem

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Wen T. Shen

University of California

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