11 research outputs found

    The influence of micrometastases on prognosis and survival in stage I-II colon cancer patients: the EnrouteāŠ• Study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The presence of lymph node metastases remains the most reliable prognostic predictor and the gold indicator for adjuvant treatment in colon cancer (CC). In spite of a potentially curative resection, 20 to 30% of CC patients testing negative for lymph node metastases (i.e. pN0) will subsequently develop locoregional and/or systemic metastases within 5 years. The presence of occult nodal isolated tumor cells (ITCs) and/or micrometastases (MMs) at the time of resection predisposes CC patients to high risk for disease recurrence. These pN0<sub>micro+ </sub>patients harbouring occult micrometastases may benefit from adjuvant treatment. The purpose of the present study is to delineate the subset of pN0 patients with micrometastases (pN0<sub>micro+</sub>) and evaluate the benefits from adjuvant chemotherapy in pN0<sub>micro+ </sub>CC patients.</p> <p>Methods/design</p> <p>EnRoute+ is an open label, multicenter, randomized controlled clinical trial. All CC patients (age above 18 years) without synchronous locoregional lymph node and/or systemic metastases (clinical stage I-II disease) and operated upon with curative intent are eligible for inclusion. All resected specimens of patients are subject to an <it>ex vivo </it>sentinel lymph node mapping procedure (SLNM) following curative resection. The investigation for micrometastases in pN0 patients is done by extended serial sectioning and immunohistochemistry for pan-cytokeratin in sentinel lymph nodes which are tumour negative upon standard pathological examination. Patients with ITC/MM-positive sentinel lymph nodes (pN0<sub>micro+</sub>) are randomized for adjuvant chemotherapy following the CAPOX treatment scheme or observation. The primary endpoint is 3-year disease free survival (DFS).</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The EnRoute+ study is designed to improve prognosis in high-risk stage I/II pN0 <sub>micro+ </sub>CC patients by reducing disease recurrence by adjuvant chemotherapy.</p> <p>Trial Registration</p> <p>ClinicalTrials.gov: <a href="http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01097265">NCT01097265</a></p

    The use of EORTC measures in daily clinical practice-A synopsis of a newly developed manual.

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    Cancer has increasingly become a chronic condition and the routine collection of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) like quality of lifeĀ is widely recommended for clinical practice. Nonetheless, the successful implementation of PROs is still a major challenge, although common barriers to and facilitators of their beneficial use are well known. To support health care professionals and other stakeholders in the implementation of the EORTC PRO measures, the EORTC Quality of Life GroupĀ provides guidance on issues considered important for their use in daily clinical practice. Herein, we present an outline of the newly developed "'Manual for the use of EORTC measures in daily clinical practice", covering the following issues: * a rationale for using EORTC measures in routine care *selection of EORTC measures, timing of assessments, scoring and presentation of results * aspects of a strategic implementation * electronic data assessment and telemonitoring, and * further use of EORTC measures and ethical considerations. Next to an extensive overview of currently available literature, the manual specifically focuses on knowledge about EORTC measures to give evidence-based recommendations whenever possible and to encourage readers and end-users of EORTC measures to contribute to further needed high-quality research. The manual will be accessible on the EORTC Quality of Life Group website's homepage and will be periodically updated to take into account any new knowledge due to medical, technical, regulatory and scientific advances

    Radioimmunotherapy prevents local recurrence of colonic cancer in an experimental model.

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    Contains fulltext : 81772.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Radioimmunotherapy (RIT) is suitable for the treatment of microscopic residual disease and might therefore have an adjuvant role after colonic cancer surgery. METHODS: An anastomosis was constructed in male Wag/Rij rats after intraluminal injection of 2 x 10(6) CC531 tumour cells. The biodistribution of (111)In-labelled MG1 monoclonal antibody was assessed after intraperitoneal administration. The therapeutic efficacy of (177)Lu-labelled MG1 (74 MBq per rat), administered on the day of surgery (D0, n = 13) or 5 days later (D5, n = 13), was compared with that of carrier only (n = 13). The primary endpoint was perianastomotic tumour growth 28 days after surgery. RESULTS: (111)In-labelled MG1 preferentially accumulated in perianastomotic CC531 tumours. RIT resulted in a transient reduction in bodyweight in both treatment groups compared with controls, but there were no other signs of clinical discomfort. No macroscopic or microscopic perianastomotic tumour growth was found in eight of 11 animals in the D0 group and 11 of 13 in the D5 group, whereas 11 of 13 controls had macroscopic tumour (P = 0.011 and P = 0.001 respectively). CONCLUSION: This study suggests that RIT may be an effective adjuvant treatment for preventing local recurrence after resection of colonic cancer

    Risk-based selection from the general population in a screening trial:Selection criteria, recruitment and power for the Dutch-Belgian randomised lung cancer multi-slice CT screening trial (NELSON)

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    A method to obtain the optimal selection criteria, taking into account available resources and capacity and the impact on power, is presented for the Dutch-Belgian randomised lung cancer screening trial (NELSON). NELSON investigates whether 16-detector multi-slice computed tomography screening will decrease lung cancer mortality compared to no screening. A questionnaire was sent to 335,441 (mainly) men, aged 50-75. Smoking exposure (years smoked, cigarettes/day, years quit) was determined, and expected lung cancer mortality was estimated for different selection scenarios for the 106,931 respondents, using lung cancer mortality data by level of smoking exposure (US Cancer Prevention Study I and II). Selection criteria were chosen so that the required response among eligible subjects to reach sufficient sample size was minimised and the required sample size was within our capacity. Inviting current and former smokers (quit 15 cigarettes/day during > 25 years or > 10 cigarettes/day during > 30 years was most optimal. With a power of 80%, 17,300-27,900 participants are needed to show a 20-25% lung cancer mortality reduction 10 years after randomisation. Until October 18, 2005 11,103 (first recruitment round) and 4,325 (second recruitment round) (total = 15,428) participants have been randomised. Selecting participants for lung cancer screening trials based on risk estimates is feasible and helpful to minimize sample size and costs. When pooling with Danish trial data (n = +/- 4,000) NELSON is the only trial without screening in controls that is expected to have 80% power to show a lung cancer mortality reduction of at least 25% 10 years after randomisation. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc

    Predictors of depressive symptoms 12 months after surgical treatment of early-stage breast cancer

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    Nearly half of the women with breast cancer (BC) show depressive symptoms in the first year after diagnosis. This has a major impact on patients' lives. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify predictors of depressive symptoms 12 months after surgical treatment. Furthermore, the stability of depressive symptoms across 12 months was investigated for persons scoring high versus low/moderately on agreeableness, trait anxiety, and neuroticism. From the 609 women with an abnormality in the breast, 223 appeared to have early-stage BC. A depressive symptoms questionnaire (Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale) was completed before diagnosis and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after surgical treatment. In addition, patients completed questionnaires on personality (State Trait Anxiety Inventory, Neuroticism-Extraversion-Openness-Five Factor Inventory), fatigue (Fatigue Assessment Scale), and aspects of quality of life (World Health Organization Quality of Life assessment instrument-100). Before diagnosis and 1 year later, 40.9% and 27.8% of the women, respectively, scored above the established cut-off score for depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms significantly improved in this period. Patients reported higher scores, when they had a breast-conserving therapy (BCT), scored low on agreeableness, scored high on neuroticism, or reported higher scores on depressive symptoms or fatigue before diagnosis. Other clinical and socio-demographic factors did not predict depressive symptoms. Besides BCT, fatigue, and depressive symptoms, personality, especially neuroticism and agreeableness, predicted depressive symptoms 1 year after surgical treatment. Therefore, it is important to screen patients on these characteristics in order to prevent long-term depressive symptom
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