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Brief Title: A Retrospective Clinical Records Review of Patients Diagnosed With Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumour at Two Tertiary Institutes in Singapore
Official Title: A Retrospective Clinical Records Review of Patients Diagnosed With Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumour at Two Tertiary Institutes in Singapore.
Study ID: NCT00718211
Brief Summary: To review the characteristics and treatment of gastrointestinal tumours at the two tertiary centres in Singapore
Detailed Description: A retrospective clinical records review of patients diagnosed with gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST) in the two tertiary centres in Singapore i.e. Singapore General Hospital and National University Hospital. Gastrointestinal tumours are the most common soft-tissue tumours of the gastrointestinal tracts. Remarkable progress has been made during the last several years in the diagnosis and treatment of GIST. Understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of GIST which is linked to deregulated KIT tyrosine-kinase activity has improved diagnosis, such that GIST is now more frequently and specifically identified. More importantly, systemic tyrosine kinase inhibitor, imatinib, has been used successfully in the treatment of GIST patients with advanced or unresectable disease. GIST has been reviewed in the Western literature but there is a lack of Asian data. The review will help us to better understand the disease in our population.Furthermore we will also examine several unresolved issues in the Western literature by looking into our local data. These include required duration of imatinib therapy, role of imatinib in the adjuvant setting (application of chemotherapy after macroscopically complete removal of tumour) and role of combination therapies. The medical records of all patients diagnosed with the disease at the two centres will be reviewed. Analysis of the results aims to: 1. to compare the characteristics of the GIST (epidemiology, site, morphology, immunohistochemistry profile) in our centres compared to the well-published literature. 2. to compare the treatment regimen and results of our centres compared to others 3. to review the role of chemotherapy in the adjuvant settings in the centres.
Minimum Age:
Eligible Ages: CHILD, ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
National University Hospital, Singapore, , Singapore
Name: Ross Andrew Soo, MBBS
Affiliation: National University Hospital, Singapore
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR