Investigator

Michal Zikan

Charles University

MZMichal Zikan
Papers(4)
A Simple Cervicovagin…Preoperative staging …Occupational therapy …Decoding the Molecula…
Collaborators(10)
David CibulaPavel DundrMunachiso NdukweOlga DubováPatrícia PintoPaula Peremiquel-Tril…Pavel KabelePeter KolibaPetra SládkováPetr Hubka
Institutions(5)
Charles UniversityUniversity Hospital H…Bulovka University Ho…Instituto Portugus De…Institut Dinvestigaci…

Papers

A Simple Cervicovaginal Epigenetic Test for Screening and Rapid Triage of Women With Suspected Endometrial Cancer: Validation in Several Cohort and Case/Control Sets

PURPOSE Endometrial cancer (EC) incidence has been rising over the past 10 years. Delays in diagnosis reduce survival and necessitate more aggressive treatment. We aimed to develop and validate a simple, noninvasive, and reliable triage test for EC to reduce the number of invasive diagnostic procedures and improve patient survival. METHODS We developed a test to screen and triage women with suspected EC using 726 cervical smear samples from women with and without EC, and validated the test in 562 cervicovaginal samples using three different collection methods (cervical smear: n = 248; vaginal swab: n = 63; and self-collection: n = 251) and four different settings (case/control: n = 388; cohort of women presenting with postmenopausal bleeding: n = 63; a cohort of high-risk women with Lynch syndrome: n = 25; and a nested case/control setting from a screening cohort and samples taken up to 3 years before EC diagnosis: n = 86). RESULTS We describe the Women's cancer risk IDentification – quantitative polymerase chain reaction test for Endometrial Cancer (WID-qEC), a three-marker test that evaluates DNA methylation in gene regions of GYPC and ZSCAN12. In cervical, self-collected, and vaginal swab samples derived from symptomatic patients, it detected EC with sensitivities of 97.2% (95% CI, 90.2 to 99.7), 90.1% (83.6 to 94.6), and 100% (63.1 to 100), respectively, and specificities of 75.8% (63.6 to 85.5), 86.7% (79.3 to 92.2), and 89.1% (77.8 to 95.9), respectively. The WID-qEC identified 90.9% (95% CI, 70.8 to 98.9) of EC cases in samples predating diagnosis up to 1 year. Test performance was similar across menopausal status, age, stage, grade, ethnicity, and histology. CONCLUSION The WID-qEC is a noninvasive reliable test for triage of women with symptoms suggestive of ECs. Because of the potential for self-collection, it could improve early diagnosis and reduce the reliance for in-person visits.

Preoperative staging of ovarian cancer: comparison between ultrasound, CT and whole‐body diffusion‐weighted MRI (ISAAC study)

AbstractObjectivesTo compare the performance of transvaginal and transabdominal ultrasound with that of the first‐line staging method (contrast‐enhanced computed tomography (CT)) and a novel technique, whole‐body magnetic resonance imaging with diffusion‐weighted sequence (WB‐DWI/MRI), in the assessment of peritoneal involvement (carcinomatosis), lymph‐node staging and prediction of non‐resectability in patients with suspected ovarian cancer.MethodsBetween March 2016 and October 2017, all consecutive patients with suspicion of ovarian cancer and surgery planned at a gynecological oncology center underwent preoperative staging and prediction of non‐resectability with ultrasound, CT and WB‐DWI/MRI. The evaluation followed a single, predefined protocol, assessing peritoneal spread at 19 sites and lymph‐node metastasis at eight sites. The prediction of non‐resectability was based on abdominal markers. Findings were compared to the reference standard (surgical findings and outcome and histopathological evaluation).ResultsSixty‐seven patients with confirmed ovarian cancer were analyzed. Among them, 51 (76%) had advanced‐stage and 16 (24%) had early‐stage ovarian cancer. Diagnostic laparoscopy only was performed in 16% (11/67) of the cases and laparotomy in 84% (56/67), with no residual disease at the end of surgery in 68% (38/56), residual disease ≤ 1 cm in 16% (9/56) and residual disease > 1 cm in 16% (9/56). Ultrasound and WB‐DWI/MRI performed better than did CT in the assessment of overall peritoneal carcinomatosis (area under the receiver‐operating‐characteristics curve (AUC), 0.87, 0.86 and 0.77, respectively). Ultrasound was not inferior to CT (P = 0.002). For assessment of retroperitoneal lymph‐node staging (AUC, 0.72–0.76) and prediction of non‐resectability in the abdomen (AUC, 0.74–0.80), all three methods performed similarly. In general, ultrasound had higher or identical specificity to WB‐DWI/MRI and CT at each of the 19 peritoneal sites evaluated, but lower or equal sensitivity in the abdomen. Compared with WB‐DWI/MRI and CT, transvaginal ultrasound had higher accuracy (94% vs 91% and 85%, respectively) and sensitivity (94% vs 91% and 89%, respectively) in the detection of carcinomatosis in the pelvis. Better accuracy and sensitivity of ultrasound (93% and 100%) than WB‐DWI/MRI (83% and 75%) and CT (84% and 88%) in the evaluation of deep rectosigmoid wall infiltration, in particular, supports the potential role of ultrasound in planning rectosigmoid resection. In contrast, for the bowel serosal and mesenterial assessment, abdominal ultrasound had the lowest accuracy (70%, 78% and 79%, respectively) and sensitivity (42%, 65% and 65%, respectively).ConclusionsThis is the first prospective study to document that, in experienced hands, ultrasound may be an alternative to WB‐DWI/MRI and CT in ovarian cancer staging, including peritoneal and lymph‐node evaluation and prediction of non‐resectability based on abdominal markers of non‐resectability. © 2021 International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Occupational therapy in oncogynecology – a pilot study

Objective: Overview of the possibilities of using non-medical occupational therapy in oncogynecology, description of the role of an occupational therapist in prehabilitation, and evaluation of data from a pilot study. Methods: The study cohort consisted of 18 patients enrolled between November 2023 and October 2024. The prospective study was conducted over a period of nine months. Patients were admitted for a 3-week intensive multimodal prehabilitation program scheduled on a 4/7 basis prior to elective surgery for primary or recurrent malignant ovarian, endometrial, or cervical cancer. In addition to the physicians, patients received prehabilitation by a physiotherapist, psychologist, nutritionist, and occupational therapist. Clinical work of the occupational therapist was measured upon examination and subsequent therapy in the areas of cognitive function, fine motor skills of the upper limbs, self-sufficiency, and quality of life. The occupational therapist applied selected functional tests and questionnaires (MKF classification, Hand grip test, MoCA test, 5× Sit-to-Stand test, WHODAS 2.0) to determine the effect of the rehabilitation intervention. Results and conclusions: Important indicators were selected functional abilities that have a significant impact on the quality of life of patients. The results of functional tests showed a significant improvement of key parameters due to intensive prehabilitation, confirming the essential role of occupational therapist intervention in oncogynecological prehabilitation. Key words: occupational therapy – oncogynecology – prehabilitation – quality of life

Decoding the Molecular Landscape of 262 Uterine Sarcomas: RNA-Seq Clustering of ESS, UTROSCT, and UUS with Prognostic Insights.

Low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas (LG-ESS), high-grade ESS (HG-ESS), undifferentiated uterine sarcomas (UUS), and uterine tumors resembling ovarian sex cord tumors are distinct non-smooth muscle cell neoplasms with varying clinical outcomes, often exhibiting overlapping characteristics. Diagnosis can be supported by identifying characteristic recurrent translocations, which may be absent in some cases, complicating the distinction of equivocal cases. Additionally, cases with overlapping features of low-grade and high-grade characteristics are recognized. To address these challenges, we analyzed RNA-seq profiles of 262 cases. Our results revealed that LG-ESS, with and without recurrent fusions, clustered into 2 partially overlapping expression profiles associated with distinct overall and relapse-free survival outcomes, with the cluster containing a majority of fusion-negative tumors demonstrating better prognoses. uterine tumors resembling ovarian sex cord tumors expression profiles closely resembled those of both LG-ESS subgroups, with NCOA3 fusion-positive cases clustering in groups with better survival outcomes. Furthermore, a distinct cluster for HG-ESS with BCOR and YWHAE fusions was identified, differentiating these tumors from HG-ESS without fusions. ONECUT3 emerged as a potential specific marker for this HG-ESS-fusion entity. A significant expression overlap was observed between monomorphic HG-ESS without fusions and pleomorphic UUS. These samples separated further into 2 mixed clusters distinguished by differences in immune activity, which significantly influenced overall survival and relapse-free survival outcomes. Unsupervised clustering of UUS revealed subgroups resembling either HG-ESS or muscle-cell-differentiated tumors, suggesting that UUS may include poorly differentiated distinct entities, such as leiomyosarcoma, and that the distinction from HG-ESS may, in some cases, be arbitrary. Our transcriptome analysis highlights several entities with distinct survival characteristics, providing a foundation for further characterization of these rare, often difficult-to-classify, tumors.

Clinical Trials (3)

NCT07400835University of Aarhus

Evaluation of DNA Methylation Markers for Endometrial Cancer Risk-stratification Using Patient-collected Urine and Vaginal Samples and Clinician-collected Cervical Samples From Women With Postmenopausal Bleeding

The goal of this observational study is to investigate the clinical utility of DNA-methylation testing in urine and vaginal samples collected by patients and cervical samples collected by clinicians, to determine the risk of endometrial cancer in symptomatic women with postmenopausal bleeding. The study aims to answer the following research questions: * What is the diagnostic accuracy of DNA methylation testing in urine, vaginal and cervical samples compared to traditional TVUS for endometrial cancer detection? * What is the 2-year risk of EC among women testing negative on TVUS and/or DNA methylation tests or those testing positive on methylation only? Researchers will compare DNA methylation testing in patient-collected urine and vaginal samples as well as in clinician-collected cervical samples, with the traditional diagnostic pathway for women with PMB, which includes TVUS evaluation, and when indicated by abnormal TVUS findings, endometrial biopsy according to clinical guidelines. Participants will * take a urine and vaginal sample * have a cervical sample collected by a clinician * undergo TVUS evaluation according to clinical guidelines * If TVUS shows thickened endometrium (≥ 5 mm) and/or irregularity, an endometrial biopsy will be collected according to clinical guidelines * fill out a questionnaire regarding acceptability and preferences of sampling methods and complete a lifestyle questionnaire.

251Works
4Papers
53Collaborators
3Trials
Links & IDs
0000-0001-5266-8895

Scopus: 6507167275

Researcher Id: M-4073-2017