Investigator

Mehmet Kulhan

Seluk University

MKMehmet Kulhan
Papers(2)
The struggle against …Relationship between …
Collaborators(6)
Metecan AtesAbdül Hamid GulerAhmet BilgiCetin CelikErsin CintesunFazıl Avcı
Institutions(1)
Seluk University

Papers

The struggle against endometrial cancer: ten years of experience of a tertiary center

We aimed to investigate the clinical and pathological factors of our patients who were diagnosed with endometrial cancer in terms of prognosis. With this study, we present our 10 years of surgical experience in endometrial carcinoma cases. Four hundred twelve patients with endometrial carcinoma who applied to our center between 2010-2019 and that we followed up were evaluated retrospectively. Most of the tumors were low-grade endometrioid malignancies. Non-endometrioid types accounted for 12.1% of cases. Lymph node dissection was performed in 395 of 412 patients (95.9%). 66 (16.01%) of the 412 patients died during the follow-up period in the study sample. Higher OS and DFS rates were associated with endometrioid histological types, FIGO stage, absence of lymphovascular space invasion, lower grade and less than 50% myometrial invasion (p < 0.05). 5-year OS at stage 1, 2, 3, 4 was found as 88.9 ± 2.2%, 65.5 ± 10.8%, 49.4 ± 0.79% and 23.7 ± 0.97% respectively. 5-year DFS at stage 1, 2, 3, 4 was found as 84.1 ± 2.6%, 65.5 ± 10.8%, 47.7 ± 0.78% and 23.7 ± 0.97% respectively. In univariate analysis, Age, tumor histology, FIGO stage, histological grade, LVSI, positive peritoneal cytology, cervical involvement, myometrial invasion and not receiving adjuvant therapy were defined as prognostic factors. Age, grade, FIGO stage, myometrial invasion, histological type, LVSI involvement, cervical involvemet, positive peritoneal cytology and not receiving adjuvant therapy are important prognostic factors for progression-free survival and overall survival in patients diagnosed with endometrial cancer.

Relationship between preoperative nutritional status with postoperative IL-10 and neopterin in gynecologic oncology patients

We aimed to investigate the relationship between preoperative nutritional status with postoperative interleukin-10 (IL-10) and neopterin in gynecologic oncology cases. This prospective study included cases hospitalized in our clinic. Preoperative cases were divided into two groups as low and high risk according to Nutritional risk score (NSR-2002). Demographic and clinical characteristics and questionnaires including the NSR-2002 form were recorded. IL-10 and neopterin levels were analyzed 1 week postoperatively. Forty-five low-risk and 43 high-risk cases were evaluated. The mean ages of the cases were 56.7 ± 7.8 and 57.2 ± 14.3 years, respectively, and no significant difference was found between them (P = 0.854). There was a statistically significant difference between the two groups in terms of upper arm circumference (P = 0.043), triceps skinfold thickness (P = 0.010), shorter wound healing time (P = 0.009), neopterin (P = 0.037), IL-10 (P = 0.043), preoperative ferritin (P = 0.001), hemoglobulin (P = 0.026), albumin (P = 0.047), postoperative ferritin (P = 0.015), hemoglobulin (P = 0.044), and albumin (P = 0.042) levels in favor of the low-risk group. Among the significant factors, only wound healing time had positive correlation (P = 0.006, r = +0.290). Nutritional status is closely related to case recovery in the postoperative period. Postoperative changes to high interleukin-10 and neopterin levels in cases with low nutritional index show the importance of nutrition in the postoperative period.

13Works
2Papers
6Collaborators
Links & IDs
0000-0002-5478-7510

Researcher Id: A-6300-2017