590 research outputs found

    Visual adaptation to thin and fat bodies transfers across identity

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    Visual perception is highly variable and can be influenced by the surrounding world. Previous research has revealed that body perception can be biased due to adaptation to thin or fat body shapes. The aim of the present study was to show that adaptation to certain body shapes and the resulting perceptual biases transfer across different identities of adaptation and test stimuli. We designed two similar adaptation experiments in which healthy female participants adapted to pictures of either thin or fat bodies and subsequently compared more or less distorted pictures of their own body to their actual body shape. In the first experiment (n = 16) the same identity was used as adaptation and test stimuli (i.e. pictures of the participant’s own body) while in the second experiment (n = 16) we used pictures of unfamiliar thin or fat bodies as adaptation stimuli. We found comparable adaptation effects in both experiments: After adaptation to a thin body, participants rated a thinner than actual body picture to be the most realistic and vice versa. We therefore assume that adaptation to certain body shapes transfers across different identities. These results raise the questions of whether some type of natural adaptation occurs in everyday life. Natural and predominant exposure to certain bodily features like body shape – especially the thin ideal in Western societies – could bias perception for these features. In this regard, further research might shed light on aspects of body dissatisfaction and the development of body image disturbances in terms of eating disorders

    Breast cancer: Monitoring response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy using Tc-99m sestamibi scintimammography

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    Background: Aim of the study was to assess the value of scintimammography using Tc-99m sestamibi in the evaluation of tumor response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Material and Methods: Results were calculated for 9 patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Scintimammography using 740 MBq Tc-99m sestamibi was performed before, during and after chemotherapy, and sestamibi uptake was scored visually and semiquantitatively to evaluate tumor response. Results: In the case of complete response (n = 3) sestamibi uptake decreased 8 days after beginning neoadjuvant chemotherapy and normalized in the following course. Focal uptake decreased more slowly in patients with partial response (n = 3), who showed clear, persisting tracer accumulation after therapy. The patients without response (n = 3) showed a persisting high tumor activity even after chemotherapy was completed. Conclusions: The preliminary data suggest that in contrast to other imaging modalities scintimammography appears to yield early information regarding tumor response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy

    Recent advances in systemic therapy. Advances in neoadjuvant (primary) systemic therapy with cytotoxic agents

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    Neoadjuvant therapy, also known as primary, induction, or preoperative therapy, is defined as the first systemic treatment a patient receives after cancer is diagnosed and indicates that subsequent therapies are intended. It was first used in the early 1970s for the treatment of inoperable locally advanced or inflammatory breast cancer. Based on a large body of clinical evidence and on the fact that primary breast cancer is today considered a systemic disease with a locoregional component, primary systemic therapy is now increasingly considered for women with operable disease for reducing mortality with lower toxicity, improving surgical options, and acquiring early information on response and biology of the disease

    Anthrazykline und Herceptin® als neue Therapieoption beim metastasierten Mammakarzinom

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    Single-agent treatment with the humanized monoclonal antibody trastuzumab (herceptin) has shown remarkable activity in patients with metastatic breast cancer overexpressing the HER-2/neu proto-oncogen. Further significant advances could be achieved with the combined use of herceptin and paclitaxel or doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide. However, cardiotoxicity remains a significant and thus far unresolved problem of the herceptin-doxo-rubicin combination. Thus, several studies have recently been initiated to identify equally effective but less toxic first-line regimens. Epirubicin, the taxanes paclitaxel and docetaxel, Navelbine(R), cisplatin, and Caelyx(R), a liposomal encapsulated formulation of doxorubicin, were selected for combination with herceptin in these studies because the appeared the most promising agents

    Retrospektive Analyse zur Dosisintensität von Epirubicin beim Mammakarzinom

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    Objective: In breast cancer the efficacy of epirubicin-based chemotherapy is possibly related to the actual dose intensity applied. We retrospectively determined the administered dose intensity and the relative toxicity and efficacy of an epirubicin-containing regimen in patients with primary or metastatic breast cancer. Patients and Methods: Fluorouracil, epirubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FEC) were either given at a standard dose of 500/50/500 mg/m(2) (FE50C) or at an intensified dose of 500/75/500 mg/m(2) (FE75C) every 3 weeks. Of the 66 patients treated, 63 were evaluable; 43 had metastatic breast cancer, and 20 patients with an increased risk of relapse received FEC as an adjuvant treatment. Results: Dose intensity and absolute dose of adjuvant treatment were 81 and 70% for FE50C and 96 and 88% for FE75C In metastatic breast cancer, the dose intensity for FE50C was 94% and for FE75C 92%. In a retrospective comparison, the 4-year overall survival following adjuvant FE50C and FE75C was 40 and 48%, respectively (p = 0.47). The dose intensification led to a higher response rate of 34 vs. 44%. There were no significant differences in response duration and survival time. The toxicity profiles were comparable between FE50C and FE75C Conclusions: In genera I, the doses applied were lower than initially planned. Higher doses of epirubicin did not result in a significant increase of toxicity. Despite the limitations of a retrospective analysis, our observations support the importance of adherence to the planned dose intensity as a prerequisite for optimal treatment of patients suffering from breast cancer. As our results could be related to selection bias, dose-intensified anthracycline-containing regimens should be further evaluated in prospective trials. Copyright (C) 2001 S. Karger AG, Basel

    HER2 and ESR1 mRNA expression levels and response to neoadjuvant trastuzumab plus chemotherapy in patients with primary breast cancer

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    Introduction: Recent data suggest that benefit from trastuzumab and chemotherapy might be related to expression of HER2 and estrogen receptor (ESR1). Therefore, we investigated HER2 and ESR1 mRNA levels in core biopsies of HER2-positive breast carcinomas from patients treated within the neoadjuvant GeparQuattro trial. Methods: HER2 levels were centrally analyzed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), silver in-situ hybridization (SISH) and qRT-PCR in 217 pretherapeutic formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) core biopsies. All tumors had been HER2-positive by local pathology and had been treated with neoadjuvant trastuzumab/ chemotherapy in GeparQuattro. Results: Only 73% of the tumors (158 of 217) were centrally HER2-positive (cHER2-positive) by IHC/SISH, with cHER2-positive tumors showing a significantly higher pCR rate (46.8% vs. 20.3%, p<0.0005). HER2 status by qRT-PCR showed a concordance of 88.5% with the central IHC/SISH status, with a low pCR rate in those tumors that were HER2-negative by mRNA analysis (21.1% vs. 49.6%, p<0.0005). The level of HER2 mRNA expression was linked to response rate in ESR1-positive tumors, but not in ESR1-negative tumors. HER2 mRNA expression was significantly associated with pCR in the HER2-positive/ESR1-positive tumors (p=0.004), but not in HER2-positive/ESR1-negative tumors. Conclusions: Only patients with cHER2-positive tumors - irrespective of the method used - have an increased pCR rate with trastuzumab plus chemotherapy. In patients with cHER2-negative tumors the pCR rate is comparable to the pCR rate in the non-trastuzumab treated HER-negative population. Response to trastuzumab is correlated to HER2 mRNA levels only in ESR1-positive tumors. This study adds further evidence to the different biology of both subsets within the HER2-positive group

    Poor survival outcomes in HER2 positive breast cancer patients with low grade, node negative tumours

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    We present a retrospective analysis on a cohort of low-grade, node-negative patients showing that human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status significantly affects the survival in this otherwise very good prognostic group. Our results provide support for the use of adjuvant trastuzumab in patients who are typically classified as having very good prognosis, not routinely offered standard chemotherapy, and who as such do not fit current UK prescribing guidelines for trastuzumab

    Efficacy and Tolerability of Lapatinib in the Management of Breast Cancer

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    Approximately 20%–25% of all breast cancers over express a key cell surface growth factor receptor known as HER2. HER2 plays a key role in cell growth and proliferation and is linked to worse clinical outcomes, making it a logical therapeutic target. The first HER2 targeted drug to be approved by the FDA, was the humanized monoclonal antibody trastuzumab, after it showed improvements in survival in the adjuvant setting, and delayed time to progression in the metastatic setting. Although highly effective, for reasons that are not clear, some patients display resistance to trastuzumab. Lapatinib is an oral, small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor, that inhibits both the HER1 ahd HER2 receptors and may be able to overcome trastuzumab resistance. Lapatinib is approved in the second line setting for use in combination with capecitabine or with letrozole. In this review, we will discuss the indications, concerns or any issues with regards to the drug
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