Literature DB >> 2074513

A protocol for bladder cancer screening and medical surveillance among high-risk groups: the Drake Health Registry experience.

G M Marsh1, C Callahan, D Pavlock, L C Leviton, E O Talbott, G Hemstreet.   

Abstract

In 1986, the Drake Health Registry Study initiated bladder cancer screening for 366 persons at high risk because of occupational exposure to beta-naphthylamine. The Drake Health Registry Study screening protocol consists of urinalysis, Papanicolaou cytology, and quantitative fluorescence image analysis. A positive screening test qualifies participants for a full diagnostic evaluation. The screening protocol has been modified during the first 3 years of the program's existence to address unexpected patterns of test results and to incorporate advances in screening technology. The current protocol, which has a two-tiered screening schedule, has been utilized successfully for 15 months. Of the 26 positive results to date most have been based on abnormal Papanicolaou cytology and/or quantitative fluorescence image analysis. Bladder abnormalities were cited among most of the 18 study members who underwent diagnostic evaluation, including chronic cystitis, inflammation, hyperplasia, and dysplasia. We conclude that the screening program is detecting very early changes in a relatively young cohort and that these persons must be monitored over a number of years to ensure adequate medical surveillance.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2074513     DOI: 10.1097/00043764-199009000-00025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Occup Med        ISSN: 0096-1736


  3 in total

1.  Drake Chemical Workers' Health Registry: coping with community tension over toxic exposures.

Authors:  L C Leviton; G M Marsh; E Talbott; D Pavlock; C Callahan
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1991-06       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Urine cytology screening of French workers exposed to occupational urinary tract carcinogens: a prospective cohort study over a 20-year period.

Authors:  Frederic Dutheil; Lucile Rouanet; Aurélien Mulliez; Geraldine Naughton; Luc Fontana; Michel Druet-Cabanac; Farès Moustafa; Alain Chamoux
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-09-21       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  Revised guidelines for the clinical management of Lynch syndrome (HNPCC): recommendations by a group of European experts.

Authors:  Hans F A Vasen; Ignacio Blanco; Katja Aktan-Collan; Jessica P Gopie; Angel Alonso; Stefan Aretz; Inge Bernstein; Lucio Bertario; John Burn; Gabriel Capella; Chrystelle Colas; Christoph Engel; Ian M Frayling; Maurizio Genuardi; Karl Heinimann; Frederik J Hes; Shirley V Hodgson; John A Karagiannis; Fiona Lalloo; Annika Lindblom; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Pal Møller; Torben Myrhoj; Fokko M Nagengast; Yann Parc; Maurizio Ponz de Leon; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Julian R Sampson; Astrid Stormorken; Rolf H Sijmons; Sabine Tejpar; Huw J W Thomas; Nils Rahner; Juul T Wijnen; Heikki Juhani Järvinen; Gabriela Möslein
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2013-02-13       Impact factor: 23.059

  3 in total

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