Future oncology
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Standard whole-breast irradiation consisting of a dose of 45-50 Gy over 5 weeks with or without the addition of a boost to the tumor bed has equivalent survival to mastectomy and is considered to be the standard of care for most patients with early-stage breast cancer. Newer techniques have been developed to shorten the course of radiation or limit normal tissue exposure in an attempt to increase accessibility to and tolerance of radiation therapy. This article will review some of the newer regimens and techniques for treating early-stage breast cancer after breast-conserving surgery.
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Review
Ridaforolimus: a promising drug in the treatment of soft-tissue sarcoma and other malignancies.
Ridaforolimus (deforolimus; AP23573; MK-8669) is a novel sirolimus derivative manufactured by ARIAD Pharmaceuticals and acquired by Merck. It is a small-molecule kinase inhibitor of the mTOR in clinical development for the treatment of cancer. Both intravenous and oral formulations of the agent are being tested in cancer clinical trials. ⋯ With single-agent ridaforolimus, mucositis and myelosuppression were dose-limiting toxicities. In advanced soft-tissue sarcoma, single-agent ridaforolimus was associated with a 29% clinical benefit rate and 2% partial response rate. A Phase III trial has recently been reported to have met its primary end point.