Publications by authors named "J R Commers"

Intraventricular drug administration via the IR is often used in the therapy of leukemic and carcinomatous meningitis. We reviewed our 10-year experience with 32 patients, with IR placed for intraventricular chemotherapy to characterize infectious complications associated with IR. Infectious complications occurred in 9 patients (27.

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A patient seeking dental care was diagnosed with acute myelomonocytic leukemia and referred to a hematologic-oncologic service for confirmation and treatment. The typical oral findings and a discussion of the disease process of acute leukemia are presented.

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Drug administration via an intraventricular reservoir is useful in the treatment of leukemic and carcinomatous meningitis that occurs in patients who have previously received lumbar intrathecal chemotherapy. The intraventricular route, however, is associated with a higher incidence of infectious complications compared with therapy given by the lumbar route. To characterize the infectious complications associated with such reservoirs, we reviewed the 10-year experience of the Pediatric Branch, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, and Children's Orthopedic Hospital, Seattle, WA, with 61 patients (49 with leukemia, 8 with lymphoma, 4 with solid tumors) who had intraventricular reservoirs placed for administration of chemotherapy.

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To assess the efficacy of single-agent therapy relative to standard combination antibiotic therapy for the initial management of fever and neutropenia in cancer patients, we conducted a randomized trial comparing ceftazidime alone with a combination of cephalothin, gentamicin, and carbenicillin. Of 550 evaluable episodes of fever and neutropenia, 282 were treated with ceftazidime alone and 268 with the combination. All episodes were evaluated for responses at 72 hours after the start of treatment and at resolution of the neutropenia.

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Of the first 14 patients with acute or chronic leukemia to undergo bone marrow transplantation at our hospital, 9 (64%), all good-risk, are still alive in remission at 18 to 42 months of follow-up (mean, 29 months) with their Karnofsky performance status between 80% and 100%. The conditioning regimen of fractionated-dose irradiation and high-dose chemotherapy eradicated their disease; only two patients relapsed after transplantation. Toxicity was acceptable.

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