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Query: KEGG:D04412 (
Lugol
)
396
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Visual inspection-based screening tests, such as visual inspection with 4% acetic acid (VIA) and with
Lugol
's iodine (VILI), have been proposed as alternatives to cytology in mass screening programs. To date, there is only limited information on the accuracy of these tests in detecting High-grade Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions (HSIL). Eleven cross-sectional studies involving 56,939 women aged 25-65 years were conducted in Burkina Faso, Congo, Guinea, India, Mali and Niger to evaluate the accuracy of VIA and VILI performed by health workers. A common protocol and questionnaire was used. For final diagnosis, all women were investigated with colposcopy and biopsies were taken when necessary. Data from the studies were pooled to calculate sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of the tests for the detection of HSIL. Of the screened women, 16.1% and 16.4% were positive on examination using, respectively, VIA and VILI; 1,063 were diagnosed with HSIL. The pooled sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values for VIA were 76.8% (95% CI: 74.2-79.4%), 85.5% (95% CI: 85.2-85.8%), 9.4% (95% CI:8.8-10.8%) and 99.5% (95% CI:99.4-99.6%), respectively. The values were 91.7% (95% CI: 89.7-93.4%), 85.4% (95% CI: 85.1-85.7%), 10.9% (95% CI: 10.2-11.6%) and 99.8% (95% CI:99.7-99.9%), respectively for VILI. The range of sensitivity and specificity for VIA was 56.1-93.9% and 74.2-93.8%, respectively, between studies and were 76.0-97.0 % and 73.0-91.3% for VILI. VILI had a significantly higher sensitivity than VIA in detecting HSIL, but specificity was similar. VILI appears to be a more accurate visual test for use in screening and treatment programs in low-resource settings.
Int J
Cancer
2004 Jul 20
PMID:Accuracy of visual screening for cervical neoplasia: Results from an IARC multicentre study in India and Africa. 1517 Jun 75
Based on preliminary reports, the use of chromoendoscopy and magnification endoscopy appears to be a valuable adjunct to standard endoscopy for the detection and classification of metaplastic and dysplastic lesions of the esophagus. Ideally, the use of this technique would enable the endoscopist to rule in or out the presence of intestinal metaplasia and dysplastic/cancerous epithelium by obtaining only a minimal number of targeted biopsy specimens--or potentially taking no biopsies at all, which could transform upper endoscopy into a much more effective screening and surveillance tool. There are several problems with the use of chromoendoscopy and magnification endoscopy in the esophagus. This technique is operator-dependent (ie, dependent on the skill and experience of the endoscopist). Studies reporting the accuracy of chromoendoscopy remain mixed, especially for Barrett's esophagus and dysplasia, which is likely explained by differences in techniques and materials used in the investigations. Staining within the esophagus is often patchy and uneven. Poor spraying technique can exaggerate irregular uptake by the mucosa. There is a high false-positive rate when staining gastric-type epithelium or in the setting of inflammation. Areas of dysplasia or
cancer
might take up stain in an irregular manner or might not stain at all. Magnification only allows the endoscopist to observe small areas of mucosa at a time, increasing the overall difficulty of the procedure and procedure length. Currently, the greatest body of literature exists concerning the use of Lugol's solution for the diagnosis of squamous cell dysplasia/carcinoma of the esophagus and methylene blue for diagnosing Barrett's esophagus. If used consistently by practicing physicians, the accuracy of biopsies could be improved. If endoscopic ablative therapy for high-grade dysplasia and early carcinoma (eg, photodynamic therapy and endoscopic mucosal resection) becomes accepted, sensitive methods of detecting residual metaplastic or dysplastic epithelium after ablation will be needed to help guide additional endoscopic therapy. Chromoendoscopy and magnification endoscopy could prove helpful in this setting. Further research in this field needs to be performed. As a first step, a uniform classification system for staining and magnification patterns should be devised. Future studies could then be performed using consistent terminologies. More controlled investigations with larger numbers of patients must be performed before tissue staining and magnification endoscopy become a part of day-to-day endoscopic practice.
Lugol
's chromoendoscopy is a simple technique for the detection of synchronous squamous dysplasia and
cancer
, but a substantial amount of work remains to be performed for the validation of chromoendoscopy for the detection of Barrett's esophagus and dysplasia. The ultimate aim of chromoendoscopy and magnification endoscopy in the esophagus is to show improved outcomes (ie, early detection of
cancer
and improved survival). These goals have not yet been realized and will require welldesigned studies in the future.
...
PMID:Chromoendoscopy and magnification endoscopy for diagnosing esophageal cancer and dysplasia. 1538 12
The modern approach to cervical cancer prevention, characterized by use of cytology and multiple visits for diagnosis and treatment, has frequently proven challenging and unworkable in low-resource settings. Because of this, the Alliance for Cervical Cancer Prevention (ACCP) has made it a priority to investigate and assess alternative approaches, particularly the use of visual screening methods, such as visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) and visual inspection with
Lugol
's iodine (VILI), for precancer and
cancer
detection and the use of cryotherapy as a precancer treatment method. As a result of ACCP experience in providing training to nurses and doctors in these techniques, it is now widely agreed that training should be competency based, combining both didactic and hands-on approaches, and should be done in a clinical setting that resembles the service-delivery conditions at the program site. This article reviews ACCP experiences and perceptions about the essentials of training in visual inspection and cryotherapy and presents some lessons learned with regard to training in these techniques in low-resource settings.
...
PMID:Training for cervical cancer prevention programs in low-resource settings: focus on visual inspection with acetic acid and cryotherapy. 1582 64
Among tumor sites, cervical cancer offers an ideal model for investigating differences in gene expression associated with transitions from normal to precancer and invasion to
cancer
. To evaluate the validity of assessing gene expression in cervical tissues acquired in a clinical setting, we investigated whether standard procedures, namely the application of acetic acid and/or
Lugol
's iodine, employed for the visualization of colposcopically directed biopsies, altered patterns in oligonucleotide (oligo) arrays. We compared microarray profiles from six women, each with three adjacent tissue samples removed from benign hysterectomy specimens and treated as follows: immediately frozen, acetic acid application only, acetic acid, and
Lugol
's iodine. Of the 22,464 original spots on the microarray, 4,850 spots were expressed at detectable levels for further evaluation upon data normalization and filtration. For each spot, the difference between topical applications was computed, and P values were calculated using a bivariate T2 test. Upon adjustment for multiple comparisons using both the Holm's and Hochberg's procedures as well as the False Discovery Rate (Benjamini-Hochberg and Benjamini-Yeuketili [BY]), we failed to identify genes differentially expressed and conclude that standard precolposcopic procedures do not substantially affect the overall gene expression patterns in the normal cervix.
...
PMID:Towards improved biomarker studies of cervical neoplasia: effects of precolposcopic procedures on gene expression patterns. 1590 87
We evaluated the feasibility and performance of visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) and
Lugol
's iodine (VILI) for cervical cancer screening in a primary health-care setting in Kinshasa, Congo. Women (1,528) aged > or =30 years were screened independently by nurses and physicians by VIA and VILI and Pap cytology. Biopsy samples were obtained from women with abnormal colposcopies and from 290 randomly chosen women with normal colposcopy. Cytological and histological examinations were performed in Lyon and Montreal, respectively. The prevalence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) of grades 1, 2 and 3 was 4.5, 1.3 and 4%, respectively. Using biopsy as the reference, the sensitivity, specificity and negative predictive value (NPV) for > or =CIN 2 for VIA-nurse were 55.5% (95% CI: 34.7-76.2), 64.6% (95% CI: 62.0-67.1) and 96.8% (95% CI: 93.5-98.7), respectively. The corresponding values for VILI-nurse were 44.0% (95% CI: 24.2-63.8), 74.6% (95% CI: 72.3-76.9) and 96.7% (95% CI: 93.7-98.6). The equivalent parameters for physicians were 71.1% (95% CI: 46.7-95.5), 71.3% (95% CI: 68.9-73.6) and 98.6% (95% CI: 96.0-99.7) for VIA and 68.3% (95% CI: 42.5-94.0), 76.2% (95% CI: 74.0-78.4) and 97.2% (95% CI: 95.3-98.5) for VILI. The sensitivity of cytology ranged between 31 and 72%, depending on the abnormality threshold used to define positivity, with a corresponding specificity range of 94-99% and a NPV range of 97-99%. Our results show that VIA and VILI performed by nurses and physicians are slightly more sensitive but less specific than Pap cytology across multiple combinations of test and lesion thresholds. Given their lower cost and easy deployment, visual inspection methods merit further assessment as cervical cancer screening methods for low-resource countries.
Int J
Cancer
2006 Sep 15
PMID:Visual inspection as a cervical cancer screening method in a primary health care setting in Africa. 1661 17
Mutations of the p53 gene are detected frequently in oesophageal dysplasia and
cancer
. It is unclear whether
Lugol
-unstained lesions (LULs) with non-dysplastic epithelium (NDE) are precursors of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). To study the genetic alterations of NDE in the multistep process of oesophageal carcinogenesis, we determined the relationship between p53 mutations and LULs-NDE. Videoendoscopy with
Lugol
staining was performed prospectively in 542 oesophageal
cancer
-free subjects.
Lugol
-unstained lesions were detected in 103 subjects (19%). A total of 255 samples, including 152 LULs (NDE, 137; dysplasia, 15) and 103 paired samples of normal staining epithelium, were obtained from 103 subjects. After extraction of DNA and polymerase chain reaction analysis, direct sequencing method was applied to detect mutations of the p53 gene. The p53 mutation was detected in five of 137 samples with LULs-NDE (4%) and in five of 15 samples with dysplasia (33%). A hotspot mutation was found in 20% of LULs-NDE with p53 mutation and in 40% of dysplasia with p53 mutation. In contrast, no p53 mutations were found in 103 paired NDE samples with normal
Lugol
staining. In biopsy samples from oesophageal
cancer
-free individuals, the p53 missense mutations containing a hotspot mutation were found in NDE, which was identified as an LUL. These findings suggest that some LULs-NDE may represent the earliest state of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma in Japanese individuals.
Br J
Cancer
2007 Feb 12
PMID:Study of p53 gene alteration as a biomarker to evaluate the malignant risk of Lugol-unstained lesion with non-dysplasia in the oesophagus. 1728 22
Most cases of esophageal cancer and colorectal cancer in Taiwan are diagnosed in the advanced stage and treated by surgery or concurrent chemoirradiation. The detection rates of early esophageal cancer and early colorectal cancer are still low in Taiwan. Metachronous early esophageal cancer and early colorectal cancer have rarely been reported. Endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) is a well-established method for treatment of early gastrointestinal cancer in Japan. We report a 77-year-old man with metachronous early esophageal cancer and early colorectal cancer detected by chromoendoscopy with 3%
Lugol
's iodine and 0.2% indigo carmine, respectively. These two lesions were successfully treated by EMR. Endoscopic mucosal resection of early
cancer
in the gastrointestinal tract may be considered in patients who are not suitable for open surgery.
...
PMID:Metachronous esophageal cancer and colon cancer treated by endoscopic mucosal resection. 1749 10
Patients suffering from head and neck cancer (HNC) have or will develop a second esophageal squamous cell
cancer
(ESCC) in 5 - 14 %. When a second esophageal neoplasm occurs in a HNC patient, the prognosis is generally determined by the ESCC, and unfortunately it is poor. Prospective clinical studies in Japan, Brazil, Taiwan, France and Germany have shown that screening or surveillance using
Lugol
chromoesophagoscopy enables early detection of second esophageal neoplasias. Such a surveillance results in a survival benefit for HNC patients. Vice versa, ESCC patients also have a risk of 9.3 - 11.4 % for a head and neck cancer. Periodic otolaryngeal examination and pharyngoscopy is recommended for curatively treated ESCC patients. Patients with a so-called field cancerisation of the airways and upper digestive tract thus require an interdisciplinary management and monitoring.
...
PMID:[Coincidental squamous cell cancers of the esophagus and head and neck: risk and surveillance]. 1770 61
In developed countries, cervical cancer screening programs have been highly successful. In the United States a 70% decrease in the mortality of cervical cancer has occurred since the 1960's largely due to the Papanicolaou test. However, it is not clear how best to translate these advances to developing countries, where cervical cancer remains the leading cause of
cancer
death for woman. Cytology-based screening, followed by colposcopic detection is expensive and requires extensive laboratory infrastructure and trained personnel, which are often unavailable in low resource settings. Techniques such as visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) and visual inspection with
Lugol
's Iodine (VILI) are less expensive and require minimal supplies and infrastructure; however there are concerns that these approaches do not have adequate specificity without extensive provider training and experience. Objective cervical cancer screening techniques which are easy to interpret, provide rapid results, and have both high sensitivity and specificity would be highly beneficial in developing countries. We have developed a multispectral digital colposcope (MDC) which is designed to rapidly image the cervix and is used with automated image analysis algorithms that provide objective delineation of neoplastic areas. In this paper we describe an effort to implement this device in Ibadan, Nigeria, to determine the feasibility of conducting clinical trials using the MDC as an experimental screening device. Our aim was to test the device in a location where it might be most beneficial and to collect data useful for developing new, low-cost, low-maintenance devices. Multiple obstacles limited the success of imaging using the MDC in Nigeria including an unstable supply of electricity and a lack of available spare parts and tools. We conclude that these obstacles must be overcome by robust and simple device designs in order to successfully test an imaging-based screening device in Nigeria or other developing countries.
...
PMID:Objective screening for cervical cancer in developing nations: lessons from Nigeria. 1782 96
The term "field cancerization" was coined by Slaughter in1953 when describing multifocal synchronous and metachronous carcinogenesis in the upper aerodigestive system. Patients suffering from head and neck cancer (HNC) have or develop a second esophageal squamous cell
cancer
(ESCC) or bronchial cancer (BC) in 5-14% of cases. When a second esophageal cancer occurs in a patient with HNC, the prognosis is generally determined by the ESCC, and, unfortunately, it is poor. Screening and surveillance by
Lugol
chromoesophagoscopy enable early detection and curative treatment of second esophageal neoplasias. Surveillance appears to result in a survival benefit for HNC patients. Vice versa, patients with ESCC or BC have a risk of about 10% for developing HNC. Periodic pharyngolaryngoscopy is recommended for curatively treated ESCC or BC patients. Patients with field cancerization should be surveilled by a multidisciplinary approach.
...
PMID:[Coincidental squamous cell cancers of the esophagus, head, and neck: risk and screening]. 1792 79
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