Cancer
-
Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Transdermal fentanyl in the management of children with chronic severe pain: results from an international study.
The current study was conducted to assess the safety and tolerability of a transdermal fentanyl delivery system for the relief of chronic pain in a pediatric population, and also to validate titration recommendations and conversion to transdermal fentanyl from oral opioid therapy. ⋯ Transdermal fentanyl was found to be a safe and well tolerated alternative to oral opioid treatment for children ages 2-16 years who were previously exposed to opioid therapy.
-
Comparative Study
Pancreatic juice cytology in the diagnosis of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas: significance of sampling by peroral pancreatoscopy.
The examination of pancreatic juice cytology could hypothetically contribute to the establishment of a definite diagnosis of malignant intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas (IPMN), but to the authors' knowledge, its significance has not been confirmed to date. The current study was conducted to assess the diagnostic value of pancreatic juice cytology in IPMN and to examine the usefulness of peroral pancreatoscopy (POPS) in sampling pancreatic juice. ⋯ Pancreatic juice cytology was found to have better diagnostic value in the patients with IPMNs compared with those with pancreatic carcinoma. POPS was found to be useful for the collection of pancreatic juice.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Twelve-year mortality results of a randomized trial of 2 versus 5 years of adjuvant tamoxifen for postmenopausal early-stage breast carcinoma patients (SITAM 01).
This study evaluated the impact on overall survival (OS) of 2 versus 5 years adjuvant tamoxifen in early breast carcinoma patients after 12 years of follow-up. ⋯ The benefits of longer TAM on OS start to emerge only after 9 years from diagnosis and seem to be more relevant in younger ER-positive women.
-
Increasing evidence has documented the value of positron emission tomography (PET) in oncology, but only limited data are available comparing PET findings with the pathologic status of regional lymph nodes in patients with cervical carcinoma. The objective of this study was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of PET in detecting lymph node metastasis in women with early-stage cervical carcinoma. ⋯ Pathologic validation of PET imaging demonstrated a low sensitivity and a high specificity for PET in patients with early-stage cervical carcinoma.
-
With contemporary therapy, the majority of children and adolescents who are diagnosed with cancer will be cured. However, curative therapy predisposes to adverse health outcomes that affect the long-term survivor's quality of life and increase the risk of early mortality. Recognition of the adverse effects of cancer treatment on growth and development, vital organ function, fertility and reproduction, and secondary carcinogenesis has been the stimulus for the development of risk-adapted treatment approaches for pediatric malignancies. ⋯ Aging also disrupts the continuity of after-cancer care, as adolescent and young adult survivors graduate from pediatric oncology practices to community medical providers who are largely unfamiliar with cancer-related health risks. Health outcomes research objectives that target cancer survivors must adapt as cancer therapies evolve and as new risk factors for cancer-related morbidity emerge. Prospectively using a multidimensional, comprehensive approach that considers host-related, cancer-related, genetic, and lifestyle factors in combination with results from focused medical and behavioral evaluations obtained from cancer survivors who participate in long-term follow-up programs provides an optimal method of defining high-risk profiles for adverse health outcomes across the age spectrum.