Cancer
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
The possible advantage of hyperfractionated thoracic radiotherapy in the treatment of locally advanced nonsmall cell lung carcinoma: results of a North Central Cancer Treatment Group Phase III Study.
A three-arm Phase III randomized trial was performed to compare response rates, time to local or distant progression, and survival for patients with unresectable (Stage IIIA or IIIB) nonsmall cell lung carcinoma treated with standard fractionated thoracic radiotherapy (SFTRT) versus accelerated hyperfractionated thoracic radiotherapy (AHTRT) with or without combination etoposide and cisplatin chemotherapy. ⋯ These results suggest that treatment of Stage IIIA or IIIB nonsmall cell lung carcinoma with AHTRT with or without chemotherapy may improve freedom from local progression and survival as compared with SFTRT, especially for patients with nonsquamous cell carcinoma. The statistical powers to detect the observed differences in median time to local progression and survival were approximately 55% and 35%, respectively. Therefore, further investigation comparing SFTRT with AHTRT is warranted.
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Current equianalgesic reference tables, based largely on single dose studies, give dose ratios of 1:1 to 4:1 for oral morphine to oral methadone, which possibly are inaccurate in patients with cancer pain who are exposed to multiple doses of these opioids. The purpose of this study was to determine the equianalgesic dose ratio between morphine and methadone in patients with cancer pain and to establish whether the dose ratio changes as a function of previous opioid dose. ⋯ The results highlight the general underestimation of methadone potency and the consequent risk of potential life-threatening toxicity. The strongly positive correlation between dose ratio and previous morphine dose suggests the need for a highly individualized and cautious approach when rotating from morphine to methadone in patients with cancer pain.