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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease lung cancer
Phenotype C0041296|tuberculosis
Sentences 14
PubMedID- 25534102 Conclusions: the clinical and radiological characteristics contribute jointly to early diagnosis and therapy of tuberculosis with concurrent lung cancer.
PubMedID- 24455507 [8] however, diagnosis of lung cancer in patients with tuberculosis or with residual effects of tuberculosis possesses some peculiarities.
PubMedID- 25452794 Pathological examination confirmed the inference that the subpleural nodule was due to tuberculosis instead of recurrent lung cancer.
PubMedID- 24345074 Epidemiology of active tuberculosis in lung cancer patients: a systematic review.
PubMedID- 26196516 Background: pulmonary diseases [asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd), and tuberculosis (tb)] are associated with lung cancer mortality.
PubMedID- 22578056 lung cancer patients with comorbid tuberculosis or diabetes are at an elevated risk of mortality.
PubMedID- 23652313 Previous population-based studies concluded that tuberculosis increased the risk of lung cancers because the incidence-rate ratio of lung cancers elevated 1 year after tuberculosis diagnosis (1.76, 95% ci 1.33–2.32 during 1–5 years after tuberculosis infections) (wu et al, 2011a).
PubMedID- 20200440 In comparison, pulmonary tuberculosis was not associated with lung cancer (or, 0.96; 95% ci, 0.62-1.48).
PubMedID- 21335509 Conclusions: tuberculosis is associated with increased lung cancer risk in male smokers.
PubMedID- 25884493 Data suggest that patients with tuberculosis are associated with increased lung cancer [35].
PubMedID- 20736841 We investigated whether aids-defining pulmonary infections (recurrent pneumonia, pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia, and pulmonary tuberculosis) affected the risk of subsequent lung cancer over 10 years after aids onset among 322,675 pwa, whose records were linked with cancer registries in 11 us regions.
PubMedID- 20539059 Mycobacterium tuberculosis is associated with lung cancer, albeit probably not etiopathogenetically.
PubMedID- 23575337 tuberculosis is associated with increased lung cancer mortality.
PubMedID- 22674956 Once the patient presented to the authors, they performed cytological investigations which established that the patient had lung cancer co-existing with tuberculosis, which indeed was the reason for his progressive symptoms in spite of antitubercular treatment.

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