16 research outputs found

    Frequency and clinical relevance of EGFR mutations and EML4-ALK translocations in octogenarians with non-small cell lung cancer

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    Background: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have improved response rates in some patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and testing for EGFR mutation and ALK translocation is recommended for all patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma. The frequency of driver mutations in elderly and very elderly patients has not been described. Patients and methods: We reviewed EGFR and ALK in patients over the age of 70 years diagnosed and treated at our center in 2015 (subgroups: 70-74, 75-79 and.80 years). We then assessed a second cohort, including all patients with lung cancer over the age of 80 years diagnosed in 2014. We also analyzed smoking history, treatment and response. Results: In the 2015 cohort of 179 patients, 16 were 80 years or older at diagnosis. Six of eight (75%) octogenarians with non-squamous NSCLC were EGFR or ALK positive. The 2014 cohort confirmed the high rate of driver alterations in octogenarians. Of 334 patients, 32 were 80 years or older and, of these, 10 had non-squamous histology and were tested for driver alterations (four of 10 [40%] EGFR or ALK positive). Rates of genetic drivers were somewhat lower in patients with non-squamous NSCLC aged 70-74 years (27.0%) and 75-79 years (26.7%). When treated with a TKI, octogenarians had high response rates and progression-free survival. Most octogenarians with lung adenocarcinoma were never smokers, with an inverse correlation of pack-years smoked to age at diagnosis. Conclusion: Very elderly patients with non-squamous NSCLC show high rates of driver alterations in EGFR and ALK. This, often frail and comorbid, population may not be fit for treatment with cytotoxic chemotherapy and may benefit from targeted treatments. Testing for EGFR and ALK alterations should not be restricted to younger patients. The biology of lung cancer in the very elderly may differ from that of moderately elderly patients, as longevity may select for individuals more resistant to, or with little exposure to, environmental carcinogens

    Nivolumab

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    Delayed diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome might be aggravated by gender bias

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    Background Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome is a rare genetic tumor syndrome characterized by renal cell cancer, lung bullae, pneumothorax, and fibrofolliculoma. Patients with such orphan tumor disorders are at risk of not receiving a timely diagnosis. In the present, gender-sensitive study, we analyzed the delay between onset of symptoms and diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome. Methods Clinical data of 158 patients from 91 unrelated families were collected. FLCN mutation testing was performed in index patients and family members. Findings The occurrence of the first symptom (fibrofolliculoma, pneumothorax or renal cell cancer) was rarely followed by a timely diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome and did so significantly less often in female (1.3%) compared to male (11.4%) patients (chi-square 6.83, p-value 0.009). Only 17 out of 39 renal cell cancers (7/17 female, 10/22 male patients) were promptly recognized as a symptom of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome. Patients in which renal cell cancer was initially not recognized as a symptom of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome waited 9.7 years (females SD 9.2, range 1-29) and 8.8 years (males, SD 4.1, range 2-11) for their diagnosis, respectively. Four (three female, one male) patients developed renal cell cancer twice before the genetic tumor syndrome was diagnosed. The delay between fibrofolliculoma or pneumothorax as a first symptom and diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome was considerable but not significantly different between females and males (18.1/17.19 versus 16.1/18.92 years). Furthermore, 73 patients were only diagnosed due to family history (delay 15.1 years in females and 17.4 years in males). Interpretation The delay between onset of symptoms and diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome can be substantial and gender-dependent, causing considerable health risks for patients and their families. It is therefore important to create more awareness of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome and resolve gender biases in diagnostic work-up. Copyright (C) 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

    Proteins and cholesterol lipid vesicles are mediators of drug release from thermosensitive liposomes.

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    Thermosensitive liposomes (TSL) are a promising tool for triggered drug delivery in combination with local hyperthermia. Objective of this study was to investigate the influence of serum on TSL in more detail and to identify serum components which are responsible for increasing drug release. Four different formulations were investigated: DPPC/DSPC/1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphodiglycerol (DPPG(2)) 50/20/30 (mol/mol) (DPPG(2)-TSL); DPPC/DSPC/DPPG(2)/DSPE-PEG2000 50/15/30/5 (mol/mol) (DPPG(2)/PEG-TSL), DPPC/P-Lyso-PC/DSPE-PEG2000 90/10/4 (mol/mol) (PEG/Lyso-TSL), and DPPC/DSPC/DSPE-PEG2000 80/15/5 (mol/mol) (PEG-TSL). DPPG(2)-TSL was the only formulation which was unaffected by osmotic stress. All formulations tested were influenced by serum components but the susceptibility was depended on the lipid composition of the vesicle. Presence of albumin (HSA) or cholesterol-containing lipid vesicles (DPPC/Chol-LLV) increased the membrane permeability for all tested formulations at temperatures around and above T(m) in a concentration based manner. PEGylation was not able to prevent the observed effect. PEG-TSL and PEG/Lyso-TSL were more susceptible to DPPC/Chol-LLV than DPPG(2)-containing TSL. In contrast, immunoglobulin type G (IgG) affected only anionic formulations. The membrane of DPPG(2)-TSL and DPPG(2)/PEG-TSL was more susceptible toward IgG as compared to HSA. DPPG(2)-TSL and PEG/Lyso-TSL were differentially influenced by fetal calf serum (FCS). As DPPG(2)-TSL was stabilized by pre-incubation with FCS at 37°C, this was the opposite for PEG/Lyso-TSL which were destabilized under these conditions. Individual serum components were unable to mimic the complex situation in full serum. Hence, the use of plasma or serum is still inevitable to investigate stability and release properties of novel TSL formulations until all serum components have been identified that alter TSL integrity

    Osimertinib rechallenge under steroid protection following osimertinib-induced pneumonitis: three case studies

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    Osimertinib is a third-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor that became the preferred first-line treatment option for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer with sensitizing epidermal growth factor receptor mutations. Drug-induced pneumonitis is known to occur with osimertinib. In case of severe pneumonitis, discontinuation of treatment and therapy with corticosteroids is recommended, and a treatment switch is usually performed. We herein report the treatment course in three patients who were rechallenged with osimertinib under steroid protection following an osimertinib-induced pneumonitis. All our patients were initially re-exposed to a lower dose of osimertinib. Two patients were successfully rechallenged under prednisolone protection. The third patient, who was initially retreated with osimertinib without steroid protection, suffered from a recurrent pneumonitis, and was later rechallenged successfully under steroid protection. Our case series indicates that rechallenge with osimertinib following recovery from osimertinib-induced pneumonitis allows a successful rechallenge in individual cases when alternative treatment options are lacking. Concomitant steroids appear to protect against flares of pneumonitis during rechallenge

    The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on processes, resource use and cost in palliative care

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    Abstract Background The COVID-19 pandemic impacts on working routines and workload of palliative care (PC) teams but information is lacking how resource use and associated hospital costs for PC changed at patient-level during the pandemic. We aim to describe differences in patient characteristics, care processes and resource use in specialist PC (PC unit and PC advisory team) in a university hospital before and during the first pandemic year. Methods Retrospective, cross-sectional study using routine data of all patients cared for in a PC unit and a PC advisory team during 10–12/2019 and 10–12/2020. Data included patient characteristics (age, sex, cancer/non-cancer, symptom/problem burden using Integrated Palliative Care Outcome Scale (IPOS)), information on care episode, and labour time calculated in care minutes. Cost calculation with combined top-down bottom-up approach with hospital’s cost data from 2019. Descriptive statistics and comparisons between groups using parametric and non-parametric tests. Results Inclusion of 55/76 patient episodes in 2019/2020 from the PC unit and 135/120 episodes from the PC advisory team, respectively. IPOS scores were lower in 2020 (PCU: 2.0 points; PC advisory team: 3.0 points). The number of completed assessments differed considerably between years (PCU: episode beginning 30.9%/54.0% in 2019/2020; PC advisory team: 47.4%/40.0%). Care episodes were by one day shorter in 2020 in the PC advisory team. Only slight non-significant differences were observed regarding total minutes/day and patient (PCU: 150.0/141.1 min., PC advisory team: 54.2/66.9 min.). Staff minutes showed a significant decrease in minutes spent in direct contact with relatives (PCU: 13.9/7.3 min/day in 2019/2020, PC advisory team: 5.0/3.5 min/day). Costs per patient/day decreased significantly in 2020 compared to 2019 on the PCU (1075 Euro/944 Euro for 2019/2020) and increased significantly for the PC advisory team (161 Euro/200 Euro for 2019/2020). Overhead costs accounted for more than two thirds of total costs. Direct patient cost differed only slightly (PCU: 134.7 Euro/131.1 Euro in 2019/2020, PC advisory team: 54.4 Euro/57.3 Euro). Conclusions The pandemic partially impacted on daily work routines, especially on time spent with relatives and palliative care problem assessments. Care processes and quality of care might vary and have different outcomes during a crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Direct costs per patient/day were comparable, regardless of the pandemic

    Non-ionic Gd-based MRI contrast agents are optimal for encapsulation into phosphatidyldiglycerol-based thermosensitive liposomes.

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    Thermosensitive liposomes (TSL) with encapsulated magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) longitudinal relaxation time (T-1) contrast agents (CAs) have been proposed for MRI assisted interventional thermotherapy in solid tumors. Here the feasibility of 6 clinically approved CAs (Gd-DTPA, Gd-BOPTA, Gd-DOTA, Gd-BT-DO3A, Gd-DTPA-BMA, and Gd-HP-DO3A) for formulation into TSL was investigated. CAs were passively encapsulated with 323 mOs kg(-1) into 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine/1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphodiglycerol 50/20/30 (mol/mol) TSL (DPPG(2)-TSL) to obtain stable formulations. T-1 relaxivity (r(1)) and diffusive permeability to water (P-d) across the membrane were determined. Shelf life at 4 degrees C was investigated by determining lysolipid content up to 10 weeks after preparation. All preparations were monodispersed with comparable small vesicle sizes (similar to 135 nm). Neither zeta potential nor phase transition temperature (T-m) was affected by the CA. The formulations showed an increase in r1 in the temperature range between 38 and 44 degrees C. This correlated with the phase transition

    Consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on lung cancer care and patient health in a German lung cancer center: results from a cross-sectional questionnaire

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    Background The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has caused a global COVID-19 pandemic, leading to worldwide changes in public health measures. In addition to changes in the public sector (lockdowns, contact restrictions), hospitals modified care to minimize risk of infection and to mobilize resources for COVID-19 patients. Our study aimed to assess the impact of these measures on access to care and behaviour of patients with thoracic malignancies. Methods Thoracic oncology patients were surveyed in October 2020 using paper-based questionnaires to assess access to ambulatory care services and tumor-directed therapy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, behaviour regarding social distancing and wearing of face masks were assessed, as well as COVID-19 exposure, testing and vaccination. Results are presented as absolute and relative frequencies for categorical variables and means with standard deviation for numerical variables. We used t-test, and ANOVA to compare differences in metric variables and Chi 2 -test to compare proportions between groups. Results 93 of 245 (38%) patients surveyed completed the questionnaire. Respiration therapy and physical therapy were unavailable for 57% to 70% of patients during March/April. Appointments for tumor-directed therapy, tumor imaging, and follow-up care were postponed or cancelled for 18.9%, 13.6%, and 14.8% of patients, respectively. Patients reported their general health as mostly unaffected. The majority of patients surveyed did not report reducing their contacts with family. The majority reduced contact with friends. Most patients wore community masks, although a significant proportion reported respiratory difficulties during prolonged mask-wearing. 74 patients (80%) reported willingness to be vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Conclusions This survey provides insights into the patient experience during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Munich, Germany. Most patients reported no negative changes to cancer treatments or general health; however, allied health services were greatly impacted. Patients reported gaps in social distancing, but were prepared to wear community masks. The willingness to get vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 was high. This information is not only of high relevance to policy makers, but also to health care providers
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