Annals of internal medicine
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Expanding patient involvement in care. Effects on patient outcomes.
An intervention was developed to increase patient involvement in care. Using a treatment algorithm as a guide, patients were helped to read their medical record and coached to ask questions and negotiate medical decisions with their physicians during a 20-minute session before their regularly scheduled visit. ⋯ Analysis of audiotapes of physician-patient interactions showed that patients in the experimental group were twice as effective as control patients in obtaining information from physicians (p less than 0.05). Results of the intervention included increased involvement in the interaction with the physician, fewer limitations imposed by the disease on patients' functional ability, and increased preference for active involvement in medical decision-making.
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The risk of hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma was evaluated in 401 members of 14 families with an autosomal dominant form of melanoma. We documented 127 primary melanomas in 69 family members, including 39 new melanomas diagnosed in 22 study participants from the time of first examination through a maximum of 8 years of follow-up. The 39 newly diagnosed melanomas occurred only in family members with dysplastic nevi, a known precursor of familial melanoma. ⋯ The prospective age-adjusted incidence for melanoma was 14.3/1000 patients with dysplastic nevus per year, with a cumulative melanoma risk (+/- SE) of 7.2% (+/- 3.6) at 8 years. The actuarial probability of melanoma developing in family members with dysplastic nevi was 56.0% (+/- 10.1) from age 20 to age 59. This study confirms that dysplastic nevi are clinical markers of high risk for, and precursors of, hereditary melanoma.
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Although an aggressive form of Kaposi's sarcoma often develops in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, most patients die due to opportunistic infections rather than the direct effects of this tumor. Because Kaposi's sarcoma has caused pulmonary dysfunction in a number of our patients, we attempted to characterize features of pulmonary dysfunction induced by Kaposi's sarcoma. In 66 patients with Kaposi's sarcoma treated between 1982 and 1984 there were 30 episodes of pulmonary dysfunction that resulted in a biopsy. ⋯ Clinical and radiologic features of pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma an infection were indistinguishable. Pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma could only be documented in large tissue sections available from open-lung biopsy or autopsy samples. Because chemotherapy or radiation therapy appears to provide palliation, clinicians should recognize Kaposi's sarcoma as a cause of pulmonary disease in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.