Mostafa Vahedian; Seyed Jalal Eshagh Hoseini; amir hamta; mohammadreza saadati; Hamid Farahani
Volume 24, Issue 4 , 2022
Abstract
Background: Despite clinical and basic different investigations, the role of plasma adipokines, such as adiponectin as a precise predictor of the risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) is still conflicting.
Aim: This study investigated the association between CRC and insulin resistance, obesity, and plasma ...
Read More
Background: Despite clinical and basic different investigations, the role of plasma adipokines, such as adiponectin as a precise predictor of the risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) is still conflicting.
Aim: This study investigated the association between CRC and insulin resistance, obesity, and plasma adiponectin level for the first time in Iran.
Method: A total of 80 subjects (including 45 CRC patients and 35 healthy individuals) were enrolled in this case-control study. Demographic, anthropometric, and clinical data were recorded, and serum levels of adiponectin, insulin, and glucose were evaluated using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and glucose oxidase technique, respectively. Insulin resistance index (HOMA-IR) was measured as well.
Results: The mean±SD plasma adiponectin concentration of the CRC patients (7.98±0.64 ng/ml) was not significantly higher, compared to that in the control group (8.05±1.14 ng/mL). The mean±SD of HOMA-IR and plasma glucose levels (1.81±0.61 and 7.64±1.34 mm/L, respectively) of the CRC group were significantly higher (P<0.05), compared to the control group (1.37±0.3 and 119±1.1 mg/dL, respectively); however, plasma insulin wasnt significantly different in the two study groups. Following the stratification of CRC patients according to the tumor site, a significantly lower level of adiponectin (7.36 ±1.1 ng/ml) (P<0.05) and a significantly higher level of HOMA-IR (2.08±0.44) were observed in patients with colon cancer (P<0.005), compared to the controls. Regression among the plasma adiponectin and the plasma insulin and HOMA was negative in the control and CRC groups.
Conclusion: Insulin resistance has an important role in the development of CRC, especially in genesis colon cancer, regardless of the change that it causes in plasma levels of adiponectin.
Amir Hamta; Anoshirvan Kazemnejad; Mohammad Gholami Fesharaki; Roya Farhadi
Volume 19, Issue 5 , May 2017, , Pages 1-6
Abstract
Background: The effectiveness of cervical cerclage (CC) in mothers suffering cervical incompetence (CI) for preventing preterm birth (PTB) in twin gestations remains controversial. Some studies show that it plays a preventive role in the occurrence of PTB, while others suggest it is ineffective.Objectives: ...
Read More
Background: The effectiveness of cervical cerclage (CC) in mothers suffering cervical incompetence (CI) for preventing preterm birth (PTB) in twin gestations remains controversial. Some studies show that it plays a preventive role in the occurrence of PTB, while others suggest it is ineffective.Objectives: Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of CC in preventing PTB and negative neonatal outcome (e.g., respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) and birth weight) based on a new statistical framework: multilevel analysis and propensity score matching (PSM) in twin pregnancies.Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in the maternity wards of three general and teaching hospitals in Tehran, Iran, during January 2014 to February 2015. Using stratified random sampling with the proportional allocation method, twin pregnancieswere randomly selected from the medical files list. Of 431 eligible individuals, 31 patients underwent CC as a result of CI, and the others had healthy cervixes and no CC. Next, variables that confound the relationships between CC and PTB (e.g., assisted reproductive technology (ART), preterm rupture of membrane (PROM), nulliparous, history of abortion, and mother’s age) by applying 1:2 PSM were matched in both groups. The CC group was considered the case group and, based on PSM, 61 patients, whose characteristics were similar to the CC group, were selected from 400 healthy mothers as a control group. For considering twins dependencies, multilevel modeling was used, and prevalence of PTB, LBW, and RDS, as well as mean gestational age in the two groups, were compared.Results: The standardized mean difference (SMD) shows that the distribution of confounding variables in the propensity-matched data is the same in both groups. Results revealed that, although gestational age in the case group was significantly less than the control group, the prevalence of PTB in case and control was not significantly different (P = 0.190). The prevalence of neonatal outcome of RDS and LBW in the case and control groups was not significant (P > 0.05).Conclusions: It appears that CC has an effective role in prevention of PTB, LBW, and RDS, because their prevalence in both groups was the same. However, drawing a clear conclusion regarding its role requires more research with a random clinical trial (RCT) design.