Seminars in oncology
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Seminars in oncology · Feb 2000
Organization of services and nursing care: hospice and palliative medicine.
The health care industry is changing and nursing case management is an integral part of restructured care in many institutions. Health care organizations must evaluate services and outcomes. The terminally ill comprise a large portion of patients in any health care delivery system. ⋯ Shifts in patient care will be evident due to changes in demographics, payor initiatives, and technological advances. Providing care for patients with advanced disease and the role of nursing have evolved over the past 10 years. One important area that has not changed is the passion and caring evident in the nurse's everyday practice.
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Seminars in oncology · Feb 2000
Clinical TrialSequential chemoradiation therapy with vinorelbine, ifosfamide, and cisplatin in stage IIIB non-small cell lung cancer: a phase II study.
Meta-analysis has demonstrated survival benefit for patients with stage IIIB non-small cell lung cancer treated with sequential chemoradiotherapy versus radiotherapy alone. The introduction of chemotherapy as part of a multimodality approach has improved the outcome in this poor prognostic subset of cancer patients. In the present phase II study we evaluated the safety and activity of a new cisplatin-based three-drug regimen consisting of vinorelbine/ifosfamide/cisplatin (VIP) followed by curative thoracic irradiation in 28 patients with stage IIIB non-small cell lung cancer. ⋯ The first site of recurrence was local in 10 of 18 patients (56%), distant in seven patients (38.8%), and both local and distant in one patient. Median progression-free survival and overall survival for the patients treated with radiotherapy (18 patients) were 14 months (range, 4 to 36 months) and 26 months (range, 7 to 54+ months), respectively; the 1- and 2-year survival rates were 61% and 52%. Curative thoracic radiotherapy was well tolerated after VIP induction chemotherapy; it reduced residual tumor volume in six patients.
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Seminars in oncology · Dec 1999
ReviewTopoisomerase I inhibitors in the treatment of colorectal cancer.
Over the past 10 years, a number of topoisomerase I inhibitors have entered into clinical trials and several of these have been evaluated in phase II and III studies to determine their activity in patients with advanced colorectal cancer. The most extensively studied of these has been irinotecan (CPT-II). In phase II trials in patients with colorectal cancer that was recurrent or refractory to 5-Ruorouracil (5-FU)based front-line therapy, response rates of 14% to 22% and median survival times of 8 to 10 months have been consistently reported by groups from Japan, Europe, and the United States using avariety of drug administration schedules Two recently reported phase III trials comparing CPT-II against infusional 5-FU or best supportive care demonstrated that CPT-II confers a survival advantage over either of the two other approaches. ⋯ In summary, extensive evaluation of topoisomerase I inhibitors has identified a significant degree of variability in clinical activity in patients with advanced colorectal cancer. To date, only one topoisomerase I inhibitor, CPT-II, has demonstrated a level of activity sufficient for it to become an integral component of treatment for patients with 5-FU-refractory colorectal cancer. Current and future studies will focus on the development of front-line regimens combining CPT-II and 5-FU for treatment of patients with advanced-stage disease, moving topoisomerase I inhibitors into the adjuvant therapy setting, and developing combined modality regimens of surgery, radiation, and topoisomerase I inhibitors for patients with locally advanced colorectal cancer.
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Seminars in oncology · Oct 1999
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialRituximab in indolent lymphoma: the single-agent pivotal trial.
Rituximab (Rituxan; IDEC Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, CA, and Genentech, Inc, San Francisco, CA) is a chimeric anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody that targets mature B cells and most B-cell malignancies. Rituximab was the first monoclonal antibody to be approved for therapeutic use for any malignancy. ⋯ The overall results of the trial have been previously reported; additional aspects of the trial (eg, pharmacokinetics) have been reported separately as well. The current report includes an update, expansion, and synthesis of data from the single-agent pivotal trial of rituximab.
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Patients with relapsed B-cell lymphomas are currently incurable with conventional doses of chemotherapy or radiotherapy. In recent years, new treatment options have become available for these patients, including the use of chimeric mouse-human anti-CD20 antibodies and radiolabeled anti-CD20 antibodies. ⋯ High-dose (131)I-anti-B1 antibody with stem cell transplantation generates objective responses in 85% to 90% of cases, including 75% to 80% complete remissions. Although more patients need to be evaluated with a longer follow-up period, radioimmunotherapy appears to be an effective and well-tolerated addition to the oncologists' armamentarium for relapsed lymphomas.