| Literature DB >> 30671323 |
Beate Grüner1, Petra Kern2, Benjamin Mayer2, Tilmann Gräter3, Andreas Hillenbrand4, Thomas E F Barth5, Rainer Muche2, Doris Henne-Bruns4, Wolfgang Kratzer6, Peter Kern1.
Abstract
Alveolar echinococcosis (AE) is the most Iethal human helminthic infection. The malignancy-like disease is rare, but morbidity and treatment costs are high. Objective of the study was to identify factors at baseline and during specific AE therapy influencing the long-term outcome of the disease. All patients with AE seen at the specialized treatment unit in Ulm between January 1992 and December 2011 were included in the analysis. The data of 312 patients were analyzed; 108 were diagnosed before 2000 (series A), 204 since 2000 (series B); 290 received specific AE treatment. Patients of series B were more often symptom-free at diagnosis (44.1% vs. 21.3%), had lower disease stages (50.0% vs. 34.2%) and more complete resections (57.7% vs. 20.0%), but higher rates of side effects and drug toxicity (54.1% vs. 40.8%). In series B, more patients remained relapse- or progression-free after 5 years (90.5% vs. 82.8%); after 10 years, the ratio of relapses converged (70.3% vs. 66.9%, p=0.0507). Relapses or progression occurred more often after incomplete surgery or long treatment pauses. The 5-year and 10-year survival rates were 96.9% and 90.6%, respectively, and 17% of the patients were cured. We observed a shift towards early diagnosis, earlier initiation of specific therapy and more complete resections after 2000. Although diagnosis and treatment of AE pose a challenge, with an individual interdisciplinary management 88.8% of the patients have a favorable outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Echinococcus multilocularis; alveolar echinococcosis; antiparasitic treatment; classification; risk factors; surgery
Year: 2017 PMID: 30671323 PMCID: PMC6301735 DOI: 10.3205/id000027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GMS Infect Dis ISSN: 2195-8831
Table 1Preconditions for structured treatment interruption (STI) for patients with non-resectable lesions and no evidence of extrahepatic lesions
Table 2Demographic data, symptoms and concomitant diseases at first diagnosis
Table 3Classification and PNM staging of alveolar echinococcosis
Table 4Patients with inactive lesionsa at diagnosis
Table 5Treatment of alveolar echinococcosis
Table 6Benzimidazole treatment and side-effects
Table 7State of BMZ therapy at the end of follow-up
Table 8Outcome of patients with alveolar echinococcosis
Figure 1Relapse-free time after the start of specific treatment for AE (either BMZ treatment or first liver surgery; CI=Hall-Wellner confidence limits)
Table 9Cox proportional hazards regression analysis for covariates of relapse-free time