47 research outputs found
ESMO management and treatment adapted recommendations in the COVID-19 era: gynaecological malignancies
The rapid spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus 2 infection and its related disease (COVID-19)
has required an immediate and coordinate healthcare
response to face the worldwide emergency and define
strategies to maintain the continuum of care for the
non-COVID-19 diseases while protecting patients and
healthcare providers. The dimension of the COVID-19
pandemic poses an unprecedented risk especially for the
more vulnerable populations. To manage patients with
cancer adequately, maintaining the highest quality of
care, a definition of value-based priorities is necessary
to define which interventions can be safely postponed
without affecting patients’ outcome. The European
Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has endorsed a
tiered approach across three different levels of priority
(high, medium, low) incorporating information on the
value-based prioritisation and clinical cogency of the
interventions that can be applied for different disease
sites. Patients with gynaecological cancer are at particular
risk of COVID-19 complications because of their age and
prevalence of comorbidities. The definition of priority
level should be based on tumour stage and histology,
cancer-related symptoms or complications, aim (curative
vs palliative) and magnitude of benefit of the oncological
intervention, patients’ general condition and preferences.
The decision-making process always needs to consider
the disease-specific national and international guidelines
and the local healthcare system and social resources,
and a changing situation in relation to COVID-19 infection.
These recommendations aim to provide guidance for the
definition of deferrable and undeferrable interventions
during the COVID-19 pandemic for ovarian, endometrial
and cervical cancers within the context of the ESMO
Clinical Practice Guidelines
Angiogenesis and antiangiogenic agents in cervical cancer
Standard treatment of cervical cancer (CC) consists of surgery in the early stages and of chemoradiation in locally advanced disease. Metastatic CC has a poor prognosis and is usually treated with palliative platinum-based chemotherapy. Current chemotherapeutic regimens are associated with significant adverse effects and only limited activity, making identification
of active and tolerable novel targeted agents a high priority. Angiogenesis is a complex process that plays a crucial role in the development of many types of cancer. The dominant role of
angiogenesis in CC seems to be directly related to human papillomavirus-related inhibition of p53 and stabilization of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α. Both of these mechanisms are able
to increase expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Activation of VEGF promotes endothelial cell proliferation and migration, favoring formation of new blood vessels and increasing permeability of existing blood vessels. Since bevacizumab, a recombinant humanized monoclonal antibody binding to all isoforms of VEGF, has been demonstrated to significantly improve survival in gynecologic cancer, some recent clinical research has explored the possibility of using novel therapies directed toward inhibition of angiogenesis in CC too.
Here we review the main results from studies concerning the use of antiangiogenic drugs that are being investigated for the treatment of CC
Metastatic infiltration of adenocarcinoma of the rectum in hard palate: Report of a case and a review of the literature
A 72 year-old male, seven years later the first diagnosis of rectal adenocarcinoma, referred a trouble in hard palate. Clinical examination evidenced a whitish coloured projecting area, not painful at palpation and with the largest diameter of 2 cm. The first biopsy suggested a neoplastic lesion but it was not resolutive for diagnosis. Another biopsy was executed. The second histological report evidenced a neoplastic infiltration of poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, with mucinous aspects and necrosis. Immunophenotype was compatible with diagnosis of metastasis of adenocarcinoma originated from large bowel. The pathological diagnosis was confirmed by a second pathologist. © 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Cardiac metastasis from a clear cell sarcoma of tendons and aponeurosis
An unusual cardiac metastasis deriving from a clear cell sarcom
Epistaxis in Weekly Paclitaxel Regimen: Is it Really Related to Schedule?
[No abstract available
Fertility-Sparing Options in Young Women with Cervical Cancer.
Cervical cancer (CC) is the fourth most frequent tumor and the fourth most common cause of cancer death among women worldwide. Furthermore, more than 40 % of women with early CC are affected during reproductive age and wish to remain fertile. Thus, many patients demand a more conservative policy for managing these lesions in order to have an uneventful pregnancy in the near future. For this reason, interest in fertility preservation strategies has been increasing, and the number of published studies on this topic has grown significantly. Conization was the first fertility-sparing surgical procedure tested in stage IA1 CC. However, in recent decades, other strategies have been tested, particularly for more advanced tumors. The aim of this review is to analyze the main techniques performed in patients with CC who are eligible for fertility-sparing surgery, with particular attention paid to open questions and controversies
[Vulvovaginal candidiasis: a therapeutic approach].
The vulvovaginal candidiasis represents, after the bacterial vaginosis, the most frequent cause of vaginal affection. It is esteemed that around the 75% of the women of reproductive age suffered from an episode of vulvovaginitis from candida and 40-45% have had more episodes, of which 10-20% in complicated form. The kind of candida more frequently isolated in the vagina of symptomatic women is the Candida albicans: in the 10-20% of the cases the agent is present in absence of symptomatology, and we can almost consider it a saprophytic. On the other hand, always with greater frequency fetterses can be isolated of not albicans Candida, particularly the tropicalis and the glabrata kind, usually resistant to the common therapies. The classification of the vulvovaginal candidiasis proposed by Sobel, and by now universally approved, foresees 2 clinical forms of vulvovaginal candidiasis, the vulvovaginitis from not complicated candida (VVC) and the vulvovaginitis from complicated candida (VVCC): different for pathogenesis, elapsed clinical, symptomatology and frequency. They have to be considered in the substance 2 different nosological entities, and they request a diagnostic approach and a well different therapeutic appointment. In this study we will shortly reassume the principal characteristics of it, detaining us on the most recent acquisitions in theme of therapy. The base medicines of ac. boric, to parity of effectiveness, seem to introduce the most contained cost and the best compliance, and they offer him to a complementary use or, in some cases, alternative to the more you consolidate therapies with azoli