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Wednesday 30 April 2014

WUTH publication: Amnioinfusion in preterm premature rupture of membranes (AMIPROM): a randomised controlled trial of amnioinfusion versus expectant management in very early preterm premature rupture of membranes--a pilot study.

Citation: Health technology assessment (Winchester, England), Apr 2014, 18(21), 1-135
Author: Roberts, Devender, Vause, Sarah, Martin, William, Green, Pauline, Walkinshaw, Stephen, Bricker, Leanne, Beardsmore, Caroline, Shaw, Ben N J, McKay, Andrew, Skotny, Gaynor, Williamson, Paula, Alfirevic, Zarko
Abstract: Fetal survival is severely compromised when the amniotic membrane ruptures between 16 and 24 weeks of pregnancy. Reduced amniotic fluid levels are associated with poor lung development, whereas adequate levels lead to better perinatal outcomes. Restoring amniotic fluid by means of ultrasound-guided amnioinfusion (AI) may be of benefit in improving perinatal and long-term outcomes in children of pregnancies with this condition. The AI in preterm premature rupture of membranes (AMIPROM) pilot study was conducted to assess the feasibility of recruitment, the methods for conduct and the retention through to long-term follow-up of participants with very early rupture of amniotic membranes (between 16 and 24 weeks of pregnancy). It was also performed to assess outcomes and collect data to inform a larger, more definitive, clinical trial. A prospective, non-blinded randomised controlled trial. A computer-generated random sequence using a 1 : 1 ratio was used. Randomisation was stratified for pregnancies in which the amniotic membrane ruptured between 16(+0) and 19(+6) weeks' gestation and 20(+0) and 24(+0) weeks' gestation. The randomisation sequence was generated in blocks of four. Telephone randomisation and intention-to-treat analysis were used. Four UK hospital-based fetal medicine units - Liverpool Women's NHS Trust, St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, Birmingham Women's NHS Foundation Trust and Wirral University Hospitals Trust. Women with confirmed preterm prelabour rupture of membranes between 16(+0) and 24(+0) weeks' gestation. Women with multiple pregnancies, resultant fetal abnormalities or obstetric indication for immediate delivery were excluded. Participants were randomly allocated to either serial weekly transabdominal AI or expectant management (Exp) until 37 weeks of pregnancy, if the deepest pool of amniotic fluid was < 2 cm. Short-term maternal, pregnancy and neonatal outcomes and long-term outcomes for the child were studied. Long-term respiratory morbidity was assessed using validated respiratory questionnaires at 6, 12 and 18 months of age and infant lung function was assessed at approximately 12 months of age. Neurodevelopment was assessed using Bayley's Scale of Infant Development II at a corrected age of 2 years. Fifty-eight women were randomised and two were excluded from the analysis owing to termination of pregnancy for lethal anomaly, leaving 56 participants (28 serial AI, 28 Exp) recruited between 2002 and 2009, with annual recruitment rates varying between 2 and 14. Recruitment to the study improved significantly from 2007 with National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) funding. There was no significant difference in perinatal mortality [19/28 vs. 19/28; relative risk (RR) 1.0; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.70 to 1.43], maternal morbidity or neonatal morbidity. The overall chance of surviving without long-term respiratory or neurodevelopmental disability is 4/56 (7.1%): 4/28 (14.3%) in the AI arm and 0/28 in the expectant arm (0%) (RR 9.0; 95% CI 0.51 to 159.70). This pilot study found no major differences in maternal, perinatal or pregnancy outcomes. The study was not designed to show a difference between the arms and the number of survivors was too small to draw any conclusions about long-term outcomes. It does signal, however, that a larger, definitive, study to evaluate AI for improvement in healthy survival is indicated. The results suggest that, with appropriate funding, such a study is feasible. A larger, definitive, study with full health economic analysis and patient perspective assessment is required to show whether AI can improve the healthy survivor rate.

Link to PubMed record.

Tuesday 22 April 2014

WUTH publication: Elevation of cardiac Troponin T but not cardiac Troponin I in patients with neuromuscular diseases: Implications for the diagnosis of myocardial infarction

Citation: Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2014, 63(22), 2411-2420
Author: Rittoo D, Jones A, Lecky B, Neithercut D
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study sought to determine the clinical and biological significance of elevated cardiac Troponin T (cTnT) in patients with neuromuscular diseases.
BACKGROUND: Practice guidelines regard cTnT and cTnI as equally sensitive and specific for the diagnosis of myocardial injury. Whereas cTnI is unique to myocardium cTnT can be re-expressed in skeletal muscle in response to injury. The commercial cTnT assay is claimed to be cardiac specific.
METHODS: Fifty two patients with 20 different types of acquired and inherited neuromuscular diseases underwent full clinical assessment, cardiac investigations and measurements of serum cTnT , cTnI , creatine kinase (CK), CK-MB and N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) .
RESULTS: Serial measurements (265 samples) in 25 initially hospitalised patients over a mean of 2.4 years, showed persistent elevation of cTnT ( median: 0.08; interquartile range: 0.06 - 0.14 μg/L) , CK (582; 303- 3662 U/L) and CK-MB ( 24; 8 - 34 μg/L). In contrast cTnI, measured using 2 sensitive assays, was persistently normal throughout in 22 patients. Electrocardiograms and echocardiograms were normal in 16 and 17 patients respectively and no serial changes were observed. Therapeutic interventions in patients with reversible myopathies normalised cTnT, CK and CK-MB in unison. Single measurements in 27 ambulatory patients showed elevated CK (953; 562-1320 U/L), CK-MB (18;11-28 μg/L) and cTnT (0.03; 0.02 - 0.05 μg/L), in 21, 22 and 18 patients respectively. cTnI was abnormal in only 1 patient. NT-proBNP (41; 35- 97 pg/mL ) was normal in all but 2 patients. ECG was normal in 15 patients. No patients with elevated cTnT but normal cTnI sustained any cardiovascular events in either group during follow up.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a wide spectrum of neuromuscular diseases commonly have persistent elevation of cTnT and CK-MB in the absence of clinical and cTnI evidence of myocardial injury. Re-expressed cTnT in diseased skeletal muscle appears to be the source of the elevated cTnT detected in the circulation of these patients.


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Monday 14 April 2014

WUTH publication: Phacoemulsification surgery in eyes with neovascular age-related macular degeneration

Citation: ISRN ophthalmology. 2014 Jan 22.
Author: Grixti A, Papavasileiou E, Cortis D, Kumar BV, Prasad S
Abstract: Purpose. To evaluate the visual outcomes and effect of phacoemulsification surgery on the progression of neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Methods. Retrospective, noncomparative, and interventional case series. Thirty eyes from 29 subjects with neovascular AMD treated with intravitreal antivascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) injections who underwent phacoemulsification and had a postsurgery follow-up of 6 months were included. LogMAR best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was assessed preoperatively; 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months postoperatively; and finally at the last visit. The frequency of anti-VEGF therapy, calculated as the number of intravitreal injections per month, and central macular thickness (CMT) before and after cataract surgery were determined. Results. Median (range) logMAR BCVA was 0.69 (0.16 to 1.32) preoperatively; 0.55 (-0.04 to 1.32) at 1 month, 0.52 (-0.1 to 1.32) at 3 months, and 0.50 (0.0 to 1.32) at 6 months postoperatively; and 0.6 (0.0 to 1.4) at final visit (P = 0.0011). There was no difference in the frequency of anti-VEGF injections between the immediate 6 months before and after phacoemulsification, which was equal to 0.1667 injections per month (P = 0.6377). Median CMT measured 203  μ m preoperatively, which temporarily increased to 238  μ m at 1 month after surgery (P = 0.0093) and then spontaneously returned to baseline, measuring 212.5  μ m at 3 months postoperatively (P = 0.3811). Conclusion. Phacoemulsification surgery significantly improved vision in patients with neovascular AMD, with no increased need for anti-VEGF injections to keep the macula dry postoperatively.


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WUTH publication: Amnioinfusion in preterm premature rupture of membranes (AMIPROM): a randomised controlled trial of amnioinfusion versus expectant management in very early preterm premature rupture of membranes - a pilot study

Citation: Health Technology Assessment. 2014, 18(21), 1-136
Author: Roberts D, Vause S, Martin W, Green P, Walkinshaw S, Bricker L, Beardsmore C, Nj Shaw B, McKay A, Skotny G, Williamson P, Alfirevic Z
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Fetal survival is severely compromised when the amniotic membrane ruptures between 16 and 24 weeks of pregnancy. Reduced amniotic fluid levels are associated with poor lung development, whereas adequate levels lead to better perinatal outcomes. Restoring amniotic fluid by means of ultrasound-guided amnioinfusion (AI) may be of benefit in improving perinatal and long-term outcomes in children of pregnancies with this condition.
OBJECTIVE: The AI in preterm premature rupture of membranes (AMIPROM) pilot study was conducted to assess the feasibility of recruitment, the methods for conduct and the retention through to long-term follow-up of participants with very early rupture of amniotic membranes (between 16 and 24 weeks of pregnancy). It was also performed to assess outcomes and collect data to inform a larger, more definitive, clinical trial.
DESIGN: A prospective, non-blinded randomised controlled trial. A computer-generated random sequence using a 1 : 1 ratio was used. Randomisation was stratified for pregnancies in which the amniotic membrane ruptured between 16(+0) and 19(+6) weeks' gestation and 20(+0) and 24(+0) weeks' gestation. The randomisation sequence was generated in blocks of four. Telephone randomisation and intention-to-treat analysis were used.
SETTING: Four UK hospital-based fetal medicine units - Liverpool Women's NHS Trust, St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, Birmingham Women's NHS Foundation Trust and Wirral University Hospitals Trust.
PARTICIPANTS: Women with confirmed preterm prelabour rupture of membranes between 16(+0) and 24(+0) weeks' gestation. Women with multiple pregnancies, resultant fetal abnormalities or obstetric indication for immediate delivery were excluded.
INTERVENTIONS: Participants were randomly allocated to either serial weekly transabdominal AI or expectant management (Exp) until 37 weeks of pregnancy, if the deepest pool of amniotic fluid was < 2 cm.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Short-term maternal, pregnancy and neonatal outcomes and long-term outcomes for the child were studied. Long-term respiratory morbidity was assessed using validated respiratory questionnaires at 6, 12 and 18 months of age and infant lung function was assessed at approximately 12 months of age. Neurodevelopment was assessed using Bayley's Scale of Infant Development II at a corrected age of 2 years.
RESULTS: Fifty-eight women were randomised and two were excluded from the analysis owing to termination of pregnancy for lethal anomaly, leaving 56 participants (28 serial AI, 28 Exp) recruited between 2002 and 2009, with annual recruitment rates varying between 2 and 14. Recruitment to the study improved significantly from 2007 with National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) funding. There was no significant difference in perinatal mortality [19/28 vs. 19/28; relative risk (RR) 1.0; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.70 to 1.43], maternal morbidity or neonatal morbidity. The overall chance of surviving without long-term respiratory or neurodevelopmental disability is 4/56 (7.1%): 4/28 (14.3%) in the AI arm and 0/28 in the expectant arm (0%) (RR 9.0; 95% CI 0.51 to 159.70).
CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study found no major differences in maternal, perinatal or pregnancy outcomes. The study was not designed to show a difference between the arms and the number of survivors was too small to draw any conclusions about long-term outcomes. It does signal, however, that a larger, definitive, study to evaluate AI for improvement in healthy survival is indicated. The results suggest that, with appropriate funding, such a study is feasible. A larger, definitive, study with full health economic analysis and patient perspective assessment is required to show whether AI can improve the healthy survivor rate.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN 8192589.
FUNDING: This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 18, No. 21. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.


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Tuesday 1 April 2014

WUTH publication: Epithelioid haemangioma: a rare cause of painful erections and sleep deprivation

Citation: International Urology and Nephrology. 2014 Mar 30.
Author: Lucky MA, McGuinness LA, Floyd MS, Azhar U, Shanks JH, Li C, Shenjere P, Nonaka D, Robinson LQ, Parr NJ
Abstract: Epithelioid haemangioma of the penis is a rare condition which usually presents a solid single nodule. We report a case in a 43-year-old man who presented with painful erections and sleep disturbance with two palpable penile nodules. Magnetic resonance imaging with an artificially induced erection revealed these as individual lesions, and local excision was successfully undertaken. Pathological diagnosis of epithelioid haemangioma was confirmed with positive staining for CD31. Although rare, penile epithelioid haemangioma should be considered as a differential in an atypical penile mass. Induction in of an artificial erection prior to MRI can aid diagnosis and treatment is typically with surgical excision.


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