23 research outputs found

    Bladder cancer index: cross-cultural adaptation into Spanish and psychometric evaluation

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    BACKGROUND: The Bladder Cancer Index (BCI) is so far the only instrument applicable across all bladder cancer patients, independent of tumor infiltration or treatment applied. We developed a Spanish version of the BCI, and assessed its acceptability and metric properties. METHODS: For the adaptation into Spanish we used the forward and back-translation method, expert panels, and cognitive debriefing patient interviews. For the assessment of metric properties we used data from 197 bladder cancer patients from a multi-center prospective study. The Spanish BCI and the SF-36 Health Survey were self-administered before and 12 months after treatment. Reliability was estimated by Cronbach's alpha. Construct validity was assessed through the multi-trait multi-method matrix. The magnitude of change was quantified by effect sizes to assess responsiveness. RESULTS: Reliability coefficients ranged 0.75-0.97. The validity analysis confirmed moderate associations between the BCI function and bother subscales for urinary (r = 0.61) and bowel (r = 0.53) domains; conceptual independence among all BCI domains (r ≤ 0.3); and low correlation coefficients with the SF-36 scores, ranging 0.14-0.48. Among patients reporting global improvement at follow-up, pre-post treatment changes were statistically significant for the urinary domain and urinary bother subscale, with effect sizes of 0.38 and 0.53. CONCLUSIONS: The Spanish BCI is well accepted, reliable, valid, responsive, and similar in performance compared to the original instrument. These findings support its use, both in Spanish and international studies, as a valuable and comprehensive tool for assessing quality of life across a wide range of bladder cancer patients

    Niraparib in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and DNA repair gene defects (GALAHAD): a multicentre, open-label, phase 2 trial

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    Background Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancers are enriched for DNA repair gene defects (DRDs) that can be susceptible to synthetic lethality through inhibition of PARP proteins. We evaluated the anti-tumour activity and safety of the PARP inhibitor niraparib in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancers and DRDs who progressed on previous treatment with an androgen signalling inhibitor and a taxane. Methods In this multicentre, open-label, single-arm, phase 2 study, patients aged at least 18 years with histologically confirmed metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mixed histology accepted, with the exception of the small cell pure phenotype) and DRDs (assessed in blood, tumour tissue, or saliva), with progression on a previous next-generation androgen signalling inhibitor and a taxane per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors 1.1 or Prostate Cancer Working Group 3 criteria and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0–2, were eligible. Enrolled patients received niraparib 300 mg orally once daily until treatment discontinuation, death, or study termination. For the final study analysis, all patients who received at least one dose of study drug were included in the safety analysis population; patients with germline pathogenic or somatic biallelic pathogenic alterations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 (BRCA cohort) or biallelic alterations in other prespecified DRDs (non-BRCA cohort) were included in the efficacy analysis population. The primary endpoint was objective response rate in patients with BRCA alterations and measurable disease (measurable BRCA cohort). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02854436. Findings Between Sept 28, 2016, and June 26, 2020, 289 patients were enrolled, of whom 182 (63%) had received three or more systemic therapies for prostate cancer. 223 (77%) of 289 patients were included in the overall efficacy analysis population, which included BRCA (n=142) and non-BRCA (n=81) cohorts. At final analysis, with a median follow-up of 10·0 months (IQR 6·6–13·3), the objective response rate in the measurable BRCA cohort (n=76) was 34·2% (95% CI 23·7–46·0). In the safety analysis population, the most common treatment-emergent adverse events of any grade were nausea (169 [58%] of 289), anaemia (156 [54%]), and vomiting (111 [38%]); the most common grade 3 or worse events were haematological (anaemia in 95 [33%] of 289; thrombocytopenia in 47 [16%]; and neutropenia in 28 [10%]). Of 134 (46%) of 289 patients with at least one serious treatment-emergent adverse event, the most common were also haematological (thrombocytopenia in 17 [6%] and anaemia in 13 [4%]). Two adverse events with fatal outcome (one patient with urosepsis in the BRCA cohort and one patient with sepsis in the non-BRCA cohort) were deemed possibly related to niraparib treatment. Interpretation Niraparib is tolerable and shows anti-tumour activity in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and DRDs, particularly in those with BRCA alterations

    Ocular myasthenia gravis and risk factors for developing a secondary generalisation: description of a Spanish series

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    Introduction: Ocular myasthenia gravis (MG) is the most common phenotype of MG at onset. A variable percentage of these patients develop secondary generalisation; the risk factors for conversion and the protective effect of immunosuppressive treatment are currently controversial. Patients and methods: We designed a retrospective single-centre study with the aim of describing the demographic, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of a Spanish cohort of patients with ocular MG from Hospital Universitario de Albacete from January 2008 to February 2020. Results: We selected 62 patients with ocular MG from a cohort of 91 patients with MG (68.1%). Median age at diagnosis was 68 (IQR, 52–75.3), and men accounted for 61.3% of the sample (n = 38). Most patients presented very late-onset ocular MG (n = 34, 54.8%). Binocular diplopia was the most frequent initial symptom (51.7%). The rate of progression to generalised MG was 50% (n = 31), with a median time of 6 months (IQR, 2–12.8). Female sex (OR: 5.46; 95% CI, 1.16-25-74; P= .03) and anti—acetylcholine receptor antibodies (OR: 8.86; 95% CI, 1.15–68.41; P = .04) were significantly associated with the risk of developing generalised MG. Conclusions: The conversion rate observed in our series is relatively high. Generalisation of MG mainly occurs during the first 2 years of progression, and is strongly associated with female sex and especially with the presence of anti—acetylcholine receptor antibodies. Resumen: Introducción: La miastenia gravis ocular (MGo) es la forma de presentación de la enfermedad más frecuente. Un porcentaje variable de estos pacientes desarrollan una forma generalizada (MGg), siendo los factores de riesgo de conversión y el efecto protector del tratamiento inmunosupresor objeto de controversia en el momento actual. Pacientes y métodos: Diseñamos un estudio monocéntrico retrospectivo, con el objetivo de describir las características demográficas, clínicas y de laboratorio de una cohorte española de MGo, a partir de una serie de MG registrada en el Hospital Universitario de Albacete desde enero del 2008 hasta febrero de 2020. Resultados: Seleccionamos 62 pacientes con MGo de una cohorte de 91 sujetos con MG (68,1%). La mediana de edad al diagnóstico fue de 68 (RIQ 52–75,3), con predominio de MGo de inicio muy tardío (n = 34, 54,8%) y de varones (n = 38, 61,3%). La diplopía binocular fue el síntoma inicial más frecuente (51,7%). La tasa de conversión a MGg fue del 50% (n = 31), con una mediana de tiempo de seis meses (RIQ 2–12,8). Encontramos asociación significativa entre ser mujer (OR: 5,46, IC 95% 1,16-25-74, p = 0,03) y tener AcAchR (OR: 8,86, IC 95% 1,15-68,41, p = 0,04), con el riesgo de desarrollar una MGg. Conclusiones: La tasa de conversión de MGo en nuestra serie es relativamente elevada. La generalización tiene lugar principalmente durante los primeros dos años de evolución y está asociada al sexo femenino y, sobre todo, a la presencia de AcAchR
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