Aims And Background: For the hospitalized cancer patient, time takes on a rhythm which is very different from the external reality. Based on the idea that time represents a fundamental dimension of human existence and is connected to future plans, time spent waiting and memories, we carried out this experience entitled "Life Sound" project. The objectives of the project were to experiment different and unusual ways of spending time in hospital in order to improve the quality of life of the hospitalized cancer patient, to help the patient adapt to the hospital environment, to encourage awareness of self and to give a different meaning to time spent in the hospital.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Promising findings obtained using a weekly regimen of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), epidoxorubicin, leucovorin (LV), and cisplatin (PELFw) to treat locally advanced and metastatic gastric cancer prompted the Italian Group for the Study of Digestive Tract Cancer (GISCAD) to investigate the efficacy of this regimen as adjuvant treatment for high-risk radically resected gastric cancer patients.
Methods: From January 1998 to January 2003, 400 gastric cancer patients at high risk for recurrence including patients with serosal invasion (stage pT3 N0) and/or lymph node metastasis (stage pT2 or pT3 N1, N2, or N3), were enrolled in a trial of adjuvant chemotherapies; 201 patients were randomly assigned to receive the PELFw regimen, consisting of eight weekly administrations of cisplatin (40 mg/m2), LV (250 mg/m2), epidoxorubicin (35 mg/m2), 5-FU (500 mg/m2), and glutathione (1.5 g/m2) with the support of filgrastim, and 196 patients were assigned to a regimen consisting of six monthly administrations of a 5-day course of 5-FU (375 mg/m2 daily) and LV (20 mg/m2 daily, 5-FU/LV).
J Exp Clin Cancer Res
December 2003
Unresectable biliary tract cancers have a very poor prognosis. No good systemic chemotherapeutic regimen is available. This study aimed to evaluated the activity and toxicity of a novel approach of combined loco-regional and systemic chemotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Clin Cancer Res
December 2003
Gene therapy involves the introduction of foreign DNA into somatic cells to produce a therapeutic effect. The therapeutic gene is transferred into the tumor cells using a vector. Transfer may either be in vivo in which the DNA and vector are directly introduced into the body, or ex vivo, in which cells are removed from the body, transfected with DNA and then reintroduced into the patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Patients with unresectable biliary tract carcinomas have a very poor prognosis. To improve the efficacy and tolerance of the ECF regimen (epirubicin at a dose of 50 mg/m2, cisplatin at a dose of 60 mg/m2, and 5-fluorouracil [5-FU] at a dose of 200 mg/m2 per day by continuous infusion), the authors designed a novel approach that combined locoregional and systemic chemotherapy with the same agents at the same dosages.
Methods: Thirty consecutive patients with advanced or metastatic biliary tumors were treated with epirubicin at a dose of 50 mg/m2 and cisplatin at a dose of 60 mg/m2 administered as a bolus in the hepatic artery on Day 1, combined with systemic continuous infusion of 5-FU at a dose of 200 mg/m2 per day, from Day 1 to Day 14, every 3 weeks.
Gemcitabine is considered the gold standard treatment for unresectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Intra-arterial drug administration had shown some interesting results in small phase II studies. In this study, patients were randomly assigned to receive gemcitabine at a dose of 1,000 mg/m2 over 30 minutes intravenously weekly for 7 weeks, followed by 1 week of rest, then weekly for 3 weeks every 4 weeks or FLEC: 5-fluoruracil 1,000 mg/m2, leucovorin 100 mg/m2, epirubicin 60 mg/m2, carboplatin 300 mg/m2 infused bolus intra-arterially into celiac axis at a 3-week interval 3 times or 5-fluorouracil 400 mg/m2 plus folinic acid 20 mg/m2 for 5 days every 4 weeks for 6 cycles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study evaluated the clinical activity and toxicity of combination chemotherapy with irinotecan and oxaliplatin in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer that had progressed despite > or =1 course of a gemcitabine-containing regimen.
Methods: Thirty patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer and Karnofsky performance status > or =70 received oxaliplatin 60 mg/m2 on days 1 + 15 and irinotecan 60 mg/m2 on days 1 + 8 + 15 every 4 weeks. Patients were assessed on the basis of clinical benefit response, changes in serum tumour marker CA 19-9, objective tumour response, time to progressive disease (TTP), and survival.
Aims And Background: The role of chemotherapy in locally advanced or metastatic gastric cancer has been controversial, but chemotherapy has recently been shown to relieve tumor-related symptoms, improve quality of life and prolong survival when compared with best supportive care. Furthermore, palliative chemotherapy is also cost-effective. "Second-generation" combination chemotherapy regimens were developed in the 1980s with high activity in advanced or metastatic gastric cancer (EAP, FAMTX, PELF, ECF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecenti Prog Med
March 1999
Mastocytosis is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by abnormal growth and accumulation of mast cells in skin, bone marrow, bone, gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen and lymph nodes. Today, regarding its biological features, mastocytosis (with or without myeloid accompanying disorders) is considered to be a hematologic disease. The classification proposed by Metcalfe in 1991 is the most useful in caring for patients with mastocytosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of a 64-year-old man with eccrine carcinoma arising from hand skin is reported. At the time of diagnosis he showed bilateral pneumonic metastases. Although the patient underwent two systemic chemotherapy lines, he showed further progressive disease of the lung.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntra-arterial hepatic chemotherapy (LAHC) results in significantly higher response rate than the best systemic treatment of liver metastases from colorectal cancer, but no survival advantage has to date shown because of extra-hepatic progression. From June 1991 to December 1994, twenty patients with hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer were enrolled. All patients underwent laparotomy for the placement of an intra-arterial catheter into the gastroduodenal artery connected with a subcutaneous port.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConventionally, tumor size, axillary lymph nodes status, histologic type and grading, proliferative activity, steroid receptors have been used to predict the natural history of breast cancer. In node-negative patients with breast cancer it is most important to identify biological markers that can predict the risk of systemic relapse. These features have been used to allow selection of the best treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors describe five consecutive patients with testicular non Hodgkin lymphoma, evaluate the clinical and histological characteristics and underline the importance of a chemotherapy approach both at diagnosis and at relapse. A review of the literature is carried on and particularly about the prognostic factors, the correlation with Ebstein Barr virus and the more recent integrated therapeutical approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The optimal management of primary gastric lymphomas has yet to be defined. In the past surgery was advocated as the optimal first step for patients with PGL. Recently, an increasing number of studies suggest that chemotherapy is as effective as surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims And Background: In Western countries, non-small-cell lung cancer is the most important cause of cancer-related death. To date, medical treatment for advanced stages remains of a palliative nature.
Methods: Forty-four patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer were treated in a phase II study with carboplatin and etoposide (each at 60 mg/m2 daily) in a 5-day schedule.
Recenti Prog Med
November 1995
Primary bone non Hodgkin's lymphomas (PBL) are approximately 5% of extranodal lymphomas and 5% of all primary bone tumors. A standard treatment has not been codified yet. The most received only radiotherapy but recently it was introduced combined modality treatment with radiotherapy plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecenti Prog Med
December 1994
Ovarian cancer is most frequently diagnosed at an advanced stage. In recent years there has been intense interest in the chemotherapy of this disease. About cisplatin, the most active agent in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer, some questions are only partially answered, as the optimal dose, the duration of treatment, the role of ciplatin-based two-, three-, or four-drug regimens, the role of intraperitoneal therapy, the use of old and new drugs in cisplatin-resistant patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims And Background: ocular melanoma tends to metastasize to the liver, sparing for a long time the rest of the organism. Therefore, a regional treatment is especially indicated.
Methods: eight patients with ocular melanoma metastatic to the liver were treated with intra-arterial hepatic carboplatin-based chemotherapy at the dose of 300 mg/m2 once every two weeks at an out-patient clinic.
Thirty-three patients with microscopically verified primary or metastatic malignant pleural effusion were studied: 7 had malignant mesothelioma and 26 metastatic pleural disease. The treatment was based on biochemical and clinical studies which show a synergy between cytosine-arabinoside (Ara-C) and cisplatin. These drugs were instilled in the pleural cavity at the dose of 100 mg for Ara-C and 100 mg/m2 for cisplatin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a case of breast metastasis of signet ring cell gastric cancer clinically presented as a primary inflammatory carcinoma. Metastases to the breast are uncommon; review of the literature demonstrated only 300 cases. The clinical and radiographic features of the metastatic lesion were unlike those reported in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF38 patients with advanced breast adenocarcinoma were treated in a phase II study with 5-fluorouracil and high-dose folinic acid combined with cyclophosphamide and mitoxantrone. 6 patients had received prior chemotherapy for advanced disease, all with an anthracycline-containing regimen. Treatment was generally well tolerated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF