Objective To evaluate the expression and clinical significance of Survivin in the tissues of laryngeal carcinoma using meta-analysis. Methods The case-control studies published in China about the expression and association of clinical pathogenic features of Survivin in the tissues of laryngeal carcinoma were electronically retrieved in CBM (1994 to October 2012), CNKI (1994 to October 2012), VIP (1989 to October 2012) and WanFang Data (1996 to October 2012). The reviewers independently identified the literature according to inclusion and exclusion criteria, extracted data, and assessed the quality of the included studies. Then, meta-analysis was performed using RevMan 5.1 software. Results A total of 25 studies were included, involving 1 333 cases of laryngeal carcinoma and 528 cases of health laryngeal mucosa or polyp of vocal cord. The results of meta-analysis showed that, significant differences were found in groups of laryngeal carcinoma vs. health control, laryngeal carcinoma with vs. without lymphatic metastasis, clinical stages I-II vs. III-IV, cell differentiation G1 vs. G2-G3, T1 and T2 stages vs. T3 and T4 stages, and glottic carcinoma vs. non-glottic carcinoma (Plt;0.05). No significant difference was found in groups of age more than 60 vs. no less than 60, male vs. female, and smoke vs. non-smoke (Pgt;0.05). Conclusion Current domestic evidence shows that Survivin may be associated with the whole course of occurrence, advance and transfer of laryngeal carcinoma, and positively correlated to degree of tumor malignance, which may indicate poor prognosis.
ObjectiveTo compare the clinical effectiveness of Chinese medicine and integrated Chinese medicine and antimicrobial drugs in the treatment of pneumonia. MethodsThe electronic medical record (EMR) of patients with pneumonia who admitted to the Classical Department of Chinese Medicine of Guangdong Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine from November 29, 2012 to June 17, 2022 were retrospectively collected. The patients were divided into two groups according to whether they were treated with antimicrobial drugs on the basis of Chinese medicine treatment. The non-exposed group was the traditional Chinese medicine group, and the exposed group was the integrated Chinese medicine and antimicrobial drugs group. Propensity score matching method was used to balance possible confounding factors. COX regression analysis was performed on the matched cohort to compare death rates among the groups, and Kaplan-Meier curve was drawn to evaluate the survival probability during hospitalization. The proportion of maximum oxygen concentration and duration of fever remission were compared between the two groups. ResultsThis study included a total of 898 cases, with the majority (over 95%) falling within the range of mild to moderate severity. After propensity score matching,180 patients were remained in each group, among which the baseline characteristics were comparable. The primary outcome indicators showed that the risk of death during hospitalization was same in the integrated Chinese medicine and antimicrobial drugs group and in the Chinese medicine group (HR=1.52, 95%CI 0.36 to 6.39, P=0.566), the subgroup analysis is consistent with the overall trend of the results, and the differences were not statistically significant. The results indicate that during the hospitalization, the overall and subgroup mortality rates were similar between the two groups. The treatment effectiveness on the disappearance of major symptoms such as fever, cough, sputum production, fatigue, shortness of breath, and chest pain were comparable in both groups. The secondary outcome indicators showed that there was no statistical significance in the comparison of the proportion of maximum oxygen therapy concentration and the stable duration of fever remission between the two groups. ConclusionIn the treatment of patients with mainly mild to moderate pneumonia, the effectiveness of the Chinese medicine group and the integrated Chinese medicine and antimicrobial drugs group in the hospitalization mortality, the disappearance of major symptoms, the proportion of maximum oxygen therapy concentration and the stable duration of fever remission are similar. Chinese medicine has a positive significance in reducing the use of antimicrobials in patients with pneumonia.