353 research outputs found

    Goserelin (Zoladex™) – its role in early breast cancer in pre- and perimenopausal women

    Get PDF
    Current standard adjuvant therapies for premenopausal women with early breast cancer include ovarian ablation by surgery or irradiation, chemotherapy and tamoxifen. The value of ovarian ablation in prolonging the survival of premenopausal patients with early breast cancer was clearly established by the analyses performed by the Early Breast Cancer Trialists' Collaborative Group in 1996. More recently, the value of ovarian suppression using the luteinizing hormone releasing hormone analogue goserelin as adjuvant therapy in pre-/perimenopausal women with early breast cancer has been confirmed in a series of studies involving over 8000 patients. The results from these studies provide evidence that goserelin, alone or in combination with tamoxifen, is at least as effective as cytotoxic chemotherapy in patients with hormone receptor-positive tumours and is effective when used after adjuvant chemotherapy. The use of goserelin in the management of early breast cancer presents an option which can avoid the side-effects experienced with cytotoxic chemotherapy and may offer unique benefits to premenopausal patients. The consolidation of these emerging results should help in defining the optimal role for goserelin in pre-/perimenopausal patients with early breast cancer. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaig

    Modeling of electrons and photons beams of linear (planar) accelerator Elekta Synergy in modelling system PLUNC

    Get PDF
    The article presents the experience of creating a model of beam in the non-commercial 3D Plan-UNC radiation treatment planning system (PLUNC). The results of dosimetry for electron and photon beams of the Elekta Synergy linear accelerator are presented

    SFTA2 - a novel secretory peptide highly expressed in the lung - is modulated by lipopolysaccharide but not hyperoxia

    Get PDF
    Tissue-specific transcripts are likely to be of importance for the corresponding organ. While attempting to define the specific transcriptome of the human lung, we identified the transcript of a yet uncharacterized protein, SFTA2. In silico analyses, biochemical methods, fluorescence imaging and animal challenge experiments were employed to characterize SFTA2. Human SFTA2 is located on Chr. 6p21.33, a disease-susceptibility locus for diffuse panbronchiolitis. RT-PCR verified the abundance of SFTA2-specific transcripts in human and mouse lung. SFTA2 is synthesized as a hydrophilic precursor releasing a 59 amino acid mature peptide after cleavage of an N-terminal secretory signal. SFTA2 has no recognizable homology to other proteins while orthologues are present in all mammals. SFTA2 is a glycosylated protein and specifically expressed in nonciliated bronchiolar epithelium and type II pneumocytes. In accordance with other hydrophilic surfactant proteins, SFTA2 did not colocalize with lamellar bodies but colocalized with golgin97 and clathrin-labelled vesicles, suggesting a classical secretory pathway for its expression and secretion. In the mouse lung, Sfta2 was significantly downregulated after induction of an inflammatory reaction by intratracheal lipopolysaccharides paralleling surfactant proteins B and C but not D. Hyperoxia, however, did not alter SFTA2 mRNA levels. We have characterized SFTA2 and present it as a novel unique secretory peptide highly expressed in the lung

    Suppression of forest fuel thermal decomposition under the influence of liquid aerosol and water droplets with additives

    Get PDF
    This article presents findings of experimental research into suppressing the thermal decomposition of forest fuel (birch leaves, spruce needles, kindling wood and mixed forest fuel) under conditions of exposure water aerosol and single water droplets, as well as water with specialized additives. We used typical model of fire source with fixed height 0.04 m and varied diameter 0.02-0.1m. Water spraying process, as well as interaction between water and forest fuel was registered using highspeed video camera (recording frequency 6∙105 fps) and panoramic optical methods ("Particle Image Velocimetry", "Shadow Photography"). We established principles of water additions' influence on termination of combustion and thermal decomposition of fire source model

    Comparing computer-generated and pathologist-generated tumour segmentations for immunohistochemical scoring of breast tissue microarrays

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Tissue microarrays (TMAs) have become a valuable resource for biomarker expression in translational research. Immunohistochemical (IHC) assessment of TMAs is the principal method for analysing large numbers of patient samples, but manual IHC assessment of TMAs remains a challenging and laborious task. With advances in image analysis, computer-generated analyses of TMAs have the potential to lessen the burden of expert pathologist review. METHODS: In current commercial software computerised oestrogen receptor (ER) scoring relies on tumour localisation in the form of hand-drawn annotations. In this study, tumour localisation for ER scoring was evaluated comparing computer-generated segmentation masks with those of two specialist breast pathologists. Automatically and manually obtained segmentation masks were used to obtain IHC scores for thirty-two ER-stained invasive breast cancer TMA samples using FDA-approved IHC scoring software. RESULTS: Although pixel-level comparisons showed lower agreement between automated and manual segmentation masks (κ=0.81) than between pathologists' masks (κ=0.91), this had little impact on computed IHC scores (Allred; [Image: see text]=0.91, Quickscore; [Image: see text]=0.92). CONCLUSIONS: The proposed automated system provides consistent measurements thus ensuring standardisation, and shows promise for increasing IHC analysis of nuclear staining in TMAs from large clinical trials

    Zurich Consensus: German Expert Opinion on the St. Gallen Votes on 15 March 2009 (11th International Conference at St. Gallen: Primary Therapy of Early Breast Cancer)

    Get PDF
    A German working group of 23 breast cancer experts discussed the results from the vote at this year's St. Gallen Consensus Conference on Primary Therapy for Early Breast Cancer ( March 11-14, 2009) and came up with some concrete recommendations for day-to-day therapeutic decisions in Germany. Due the fact that the concept of the St. Gallen Consensus Conference merely allows for a minimal consensus, the objective of the working group was to provide practice-related recommendations for day-to-day clinical decisions in Germany. One area of emphasis at St. Gallen was tumor biology as a starting point for reaching individual therapeutic decisions. Intensive discussion was necessary with respect to the clinical relevance of predictive and prognostic factors. A new addition to the area of systemic therapy was a first-ever discussion of the adjuvant administration of bisphosponates and the fact that therapy with trastuzumab in HER2 overexpressing breast cancer has been defined as the standard for neoadjuvant therapy. The value of taxanes as a component of (neo) adjuvant chemotherapy as well as the value of aromatase inhibitors for the endocrine adjuvant treatment of postmenopausal patients were affirmed
    corecore