121 research outputs found
A COMPARATIVE STUDY BETWEEN THE SIMPLIFIED REID’S COLPOSCOPIC INDEX AND THE SWEDE SCORE IN EARLY DETECTION OF CERVICAL INTRAEPITHELIAL NEOPLASIA
ABSTRACT:
Objective: The comparative study between the simplified reid’s colposcopic index (Simplified RCI) and the swede score in early detection of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and correlation of the findings with the histopathology reports.
Methods: In the present prospective study, 6390 women were screened by pap and VIA. Cytology and/or VIA positive women were taken for colposcopy. Colposcopic findings of 147 women were scored by Simplified RCI and Swede score; and compared. Reports and findings were correlated with histopathology reports. Data was compiled and exported in SPSS V20 for Windows for statistical analysis.
Results: In this study, at cutoff of 3 for Simplified RCI sensitivity 100%, specificity 69.70%, PPV 80.40%, and NPV 100% with accuracy of 86.49% were calculated. At cutoff of 4 for Swede score sensitivity 97.60%, specificity 60.60%, PPV 75.50%, and NPV 95.20% with accuracy of 81.08% were calculated. Simplified RCI and Swede score had good correlation with the correlation coefficient (r) 0.983; P<0.0001. AUC of ROC of both tests showed excellent performance with 0.937 for Simplified RCI and 0.936 for Swede score.
Conclusions: Simplified RCI was easier to document and to recall, which makes follow up easier. Simplified RCI scoring system is based on lesion findings of each quadrant separately, so severity of lesion not affected by size
Testicular seminoma – unusual histology and staging with sub epithelial spread of seminoma along the vas deferans
BACKGROUND: The route of local and metastatic spread of testicular seminoma is well recognised and accepted. The spread is via lymphatics to the paraaortic nodes. CASE PRESENTATION: We present a case report of testicular seminoma in a 56 year old man with previously unreported histological findings. In this case seminoma tumour cells did not appear to have spread by the expected lymphatic route. There was no involvement of retro-peritoneal para-aortic lymph nodes. The tumour appeared to have spread directly along the vas deferans in the sub epithelial plane to the mesenteric lymph nodes. CONCLUSION: This type of seminoma tumour spread has not previously been described and it is not a recognised route for metastasis by seminoma tumour. In this case the macroscopic clinical appearance was of a stage I tumour with normal tumour markers. However, the pathological stage of the tumour was surprisingly increased to stage III on the basis of histology and CT radiological findings. We present the unusual histological findings. In view of this unusual histological finding we reinforce the need for accurate staging and for resection of the spermatic cord close to the deep inguinal ring. Accurate staging is crucial in planning the treatment and follow up of seminoma and determines the prognosis
Improving HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adherence and retention in care: Process evaluation and recommendation development from a nationally implemented PrEP programme
Introduction HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), in which people take HIV medication to prevent HIV acquisition, underpins global HIV transmission elimination strategies. Effective prevention needs people to adhere to PrEP and remain in care during periods of risk, but this is difficult to achieve. We undertook a process evaluation of Scotland’s PrEP programme to explore barriers and facilitators to PrEP adherence and retention in care and to systematically develop evidence-based, theoretically-informed recommendations to address them. Methods We conducted semi-structured interviews and focus groups (09/2018-07/2019) with patients who identified as gay or bisexual men and were either using PrEP, had declined the offer of PrEP, had stopped PrEP, or had been assessed as ineligible for PrEP (n = 39 of whom n = 5 (13%) identified as trans, median age 31 years and interquartile range 14 years), healthcare professionals involved in PrEP provision (n = 54 including specialist sexual health doctors and nurses of various grades, PrEP prescribing general practitioners, health promotion officers, midwifes, and a PrEP clinical secretary), and clients (n = 9) and staff (n = 15) of nongovernmental organisations with an HIV prevention remit across Scotland. We used thematic analysis to map key barriers and facilitators to priority areas that could enhance adherence and retention in care. We used implementation science analytic tools (Theoretical Domains Framework, Intervention Functions, Behaviour Change Technique Taxonomy, APEASE criteria) and expert opinion to systematically generate recommendations. Results Barriers included perceived complexity of on-demand dosing, tendency for users to stop PrEP before seeking professional support, troublesome side-effects, limited flexibility in the settings/timings/nature of review appointments, PrEP-related stigma and emerging stigmas around not using PrEP. Facilitators included flexible appointment scheduling, reminders, and processes to follow up non-attenders. Examples of the 25 recommendations include: emphasising benefits of PrEP reviews and providing appointments flexibly within individualised PrEP care; using clinic systems to remind/recall PrEP users; supporting PrEP conversations among sexual partners; clear on-demand dosing guidance; encouraging good PrEP citizenship; detailed discussion on managing side-effects and care/coping planning activities. Conclusions PrEP adherence and retention in care is challenging, reducing the effectiveness of PrEP at individual and population levels. We identify and provide solutions to where and how collaborative interventions across public health, clinical, and community practice could address these challenges
PrEP in Scotland: Report by the Scottish HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Short Life Working Group
PrEP is an effective HIV prevention intervention, using antiretroviral drugs to protect individuals at risk of acquiring HIV. The SLWG considered the use of PrEP, recognising that it could form one component of wider targeted HIV prevention for those at the highest risk of HIV acquisition in Scotland. This report is to provide recommendations on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in Scotland to the Sexual Health & Blood Borne Virus Executive Leads from the HIV PrEP Short Life Working Group (SLWG)
PrEP in Scotland: Report by the Scottish HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Short Life Working Group
Accelerated partner therapy (APT) partner notification for people with Chlamydia trachomatis: protocol for the Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity (LUSTRUM) APT cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial
INTRODUCTION: Partner notification (PN) is a process aiming to identify, test and treat the sex partners of people (index patients) with sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Accelerated partner therapy (APT) is a PN method whereby healthcare professionals assess sex partners, by telephone consultation, before giving the index patient antibiotics and STI self-sampling kits to deliver to their sex partner(s). The Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity programme aims to determine the effectiveness of APT in heterosexual women and men with chlamydia and determine whether APT could affect Chlamydia trachomatis transmission at population level. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This protocol describes a cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial of APT, offered as an additional PN method, compared with standard PN. The trial is accompanied by an economic evaluation, transmission dynamic modelling and a qualitative process evaluation involving patients, partners and healthcare professionals. Clusters are 17 sexual health clinics in areas of England and Scotland with contrasting patient demographics. We will recruit 5440 heterosexual women and men with chlamydia, aged ≥16 years.The primary outcome is the proportion of index patients testing positive for C. trachomatis 12-16 weeks after the PN consultation. Secondary outcomes include: proportion of sex partners treated; cost effectiveness; model-predicted chlamydia prevalence; experiences of APT.The primary outcome analysis will be by intention-to-treat, fitting random effects logistic regression models that account for clustering of index patients within clinics and trial periods. The transmission dynamic model will be used to predict change in chlamydia prevalence following APT. The economic evaluation will use mathematical modelling outputs, taking a health service perspective. Qualitative data will be analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis and framework analysis. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This protocol received ethical approval from London-Chelsea Research Ethics Committee (18/LO/0773). Findings will be published with open access licences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN15996256
Greedy Growing Enables High-Resolution Pixel-Based Diffusion Models
We address the long-standing problem of how to learn effective pixel-based
image diffusion models at scale, introducing a remarkably simple greedy growing
method for stable training of large-scale, high-resolution models. without the
needs for cascaded super-resolution components. The key insight stems from
careful pre-training of core components, namely, those responsible for
text-to-image alignment {\it vs.} high-resolution rendering. We first
demonstrate the benefits of scaling a {\it Shallow UNet}, with no
down(up)-sampling enc(dec)oder. Scaling its deep core layers is shown to
improve alignment, object structure, and composition. Building on this core
model, we propose a greedy algorithm that grows the architecture into
high-resolution end-to-end models, while preserving the integrity of the
pre-trained representation, stabilizing training, and reducing the need for
large high-resolution datasets. This enables a single stage model capable of
generating high-resolution images without the need of a super-resolution
cascade. Our key results rely on public datasets and show that we are able to
train non-cascaded models up to 8B parameters with no further regularization
schemes. Vermeer, our full pipeline model trained with internal datasets to
produce 1024x1024 images, without cascades, is preferred by 44.0% vs. 21.4%
human evaluators over SDXL
The Scottish Bladder Cancer Quality Performance Indicators Influencing Outcomes, Prognosis, and Surveillance (Scot BC Quality OPS) Clinical Project
The aim of the Scot BC Quality OPS clinical project is to create a reliable prospective data set for evaluating real-world effectiveness and efficiency consequent to standardisation and monitoring of bladder cancer treatment (through the national Quality Performance Indicator programme) and streamlined surveillance in Scotland. Several work packages have been created, reflecting wide clinical and research collaboration
Evaluation of Langerhans cells counts comparing HIV-positive and negative anal squamous cell-carcinoma patients
The epidemiology of bacterial vaginosis in relation to sexual behaviour
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Bacterial vaginosis (BV) has been most consistently linked to sexual behaviour, and the epidemiological profile of BV mirrors that of established sexually transmitted infections (STIs). It remains a matter of debate however whether BV pathogenesis does actually involve sexual transmission of pathogenic micro-organisms from men to women. We therefore made a critical appraisal of the literature on BV in relation to sexual behaviour.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p><it>G. vaginalis </it>carriage and BV occurs rarely with children, but has been observed among adolescent, even sexually non-experienced girls, contradicting that sexual transmission is a necessary prerequisite to disease acquisition. <it>G. vaginalis </it>carriage is enhanced by penetrative sexual contact but also by non-penetrative digito-genital contact and oral sex, again indicating that sex <it>per se</it>, but not necessarily coital transmission is involved. Several observations also point at female-to-male rather than at male-to-female transmission of <it>G. vaginalis</it>, presumably explaining the high concordance rates of <it>G. vaginalis </it>carriage among couples. Male antibiotic treatment has not been found to protect against BV, condom use is slightly protective, whereas male circumcision might protect against BV. BV is also common among women-who-have-sex-with-women and this relates at least in part to non-coital sexual behaviours. Though male-to-female transmission cannot be ruled out, overall there is little evidence that BV acts as an STD. Rather, we suggest BV may be considered a sexually enhanced disease (SED), with frequency of intercourse being a critical factor. This may relate to two distinct pathogenetic mechanisms: (1) in case of unprotected intercourse alkalinisation of the vaginal niche enhances a shift from lactobacilli-dominated microflora to a BV-like type of microflora and (2) in case of unprotected and protected intercourse mechanical transfer of perineal enteric bacteria is enhanced by coitus. A similar mechanism of mechanical transfer may explain the consistent link between non-coital sexual acts and BV. Similar observations supporting the SED pathogenetic model have been made for vaginal candidiasis and for urinary tract infection.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>Though male-to-female transmission cannot be ruled out, overall there is incomplete evidence that BV acts as an STI. We believe however that BV may be considered a <it>sexually enhanced disease</it>, with frequency of intercourse being a critical factor.</p
- …
