27 research outputs found
A comparison of rates and predictors of hospital readmission: Outpatient versus inpatient mastectomy for breast cancer.
Contralateral breast cancer: Effect of stage on survival after unilateral breast cancer.
Rural and urban disparities in the evolution of sentinel lymph node utilization in breast cancer.
A Pilot Study of the Impact of a Single Dose of Zolendronic acid on Biomarkers in Breast Cancer.
Skin, nail, and staphylococcal infections associated with the addition of pertuzumab to trastuzumab-based chemotherapy.
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Inflammation-related proteins as biomarkers of treatment-related behavioral symptoms: A longitudinal study of breast cancer patients and age-matched controls
BackgroundBehavioral symptoms in breast cancer (BC) survivors have been attributed to cancer treatment and resulting inflammation. However, studies linking behavioral symptoms to BC treatment have observed patients only after some treatment. Our prospective study with pre-treatment baseline investigates post-treatment changes in inflammation-related biomarkers and whether those changes correlate with changes in symptoms.MethodsParticipants were postmenopausal women, newly-diagnosed with stage 0-3 BC before any treatment (n = 173 "patients"), and age-matched women without cancer (n = 77 "controls"), who were assessed on plasma markers [soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor type 2 (sTNF-RII), interleukin (IL)-6, IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA), C-reactive protein (CRP)]) and symptoms (Physical Functioning, Pain, Attention/concentration, Perceived Cognitive Problems, Fatigue, Sleep Insufficiency, Depression). Participants were assessed again 1 month, 1 year, and 2 years after completing primary treatment or similar interval in controls. Generalized linear mixed models tested 4 treatments (surgery alone or with chemotherapy, radiation, or both) for association with change per marker. Joint models tested change per marker for association with change per symptom. Models considered demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical covariates. False Discovery Rate method controlled risk of error from multiple hypotheses.ResultsAt one month post-completion of treatment, sTNF-RII and IL-6 were elevated by all BC treatments, as were IL-1RA and CRP after surgery alone (all, p < 0.05). By 1 year, markers' average values returned to baseline. Throughout 2-year follow-up, increase-from-baseline in sTNF-RII, IL-1RA, and IL-6 coincided with worsened Physical Functioning, and increase-from-baseline in sTNF-RII coincided with increased Pain (all, p < 0.01). These biomarker-symptom associations (excepting IL-6) were exclusive to patients. No other symptoms worsened, and baseline Fatigue and Depression improved in all participants.ConclusionsBC treatment, even surgery, is associated with transient elevation in inflammatory markers. In patients post-treatment, increase-from-baseline in sTNF-RII accompanies increased Pain and decreased Physical Functioning, suggesting that sTNF-RII merits development as a clinical biomarker in BC patients
BRCA germline mutations in multiethnic gynecologic patients: A 10-year retrospective analysis from a single cancer institute.
Histologic and genetic mutation information from racially and ethnically diverse populations is warranted to better inform future cancer predisposition and promote health equity. A single institutional, retrospective capture of patients with gynecologic conditions and genetic susceptibilities to malignant neoplasms of the breast or ovaries was performed. This was achieved with manual curation of the electronic medical record (EMR) from 2010-2020 with the use of ICD-10 code searches. Among 8983 consecutive women identified with gynecologic conditions, 184 were diagnosed with pathogenic/likely pathogenic (P/LP) germline BRCA (gBRCA) mutations. Median age was 54 (22-90). Mutations included insertion/deletion (majority frameshift, 57.4%), substitution (32.4%), large structural rearrangement (5.4%), and alteration in splice site/intronic sequence (4.7%). A total of 48% were non-Hispanic White, 32% Hispanic or Latino, 13% Asian, 2% Black, and 5% Other. The most common pathology was high grade serous carcinoma (HGSC, 63%), followed by unclassified/high grade carcinoma (13%). Additional multigene panels led to the detection of 23 additional BRCA-positive patients with germline co-mutations and/or variants of uncertain significance in genes functionally involved in DNA repair mechanisms. Hispanic or Latino and Asian individuals comprised 45% of patients with concomitant gynecologic condition and gBRCA positivity in our cohort, confirming that germline mutations are represented across racial and ethnic groups. Insertion/deletion mutations, the majority of which led to a frameshift change, occurred in approximately half of our patient cohort, which may have prognostic implication for therapy resistance. Prospective studies are needed to unravel the significance of germline co-mutations in gynecologic patients