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). In randomized studies, EAP demonstrated no difference in activity but a significantly higher overall toxicity and toxic death rate than FAMTX, and the ECF (epirubicin, cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil) regimen gave a survival and response advantage, tolerable toxicity, better quality of life and was more cost-effective than FAMTX.
Methods: Sixty patients with locally advanced or metastatic gastric cancer were treated with the ECF regimen (21 weeks of 5-fluorouracil given by continuous infusion through a central line at 200 mg/m2 for 24-hr combined with cisplatin at 60 mg/M2 iv and epirubicin at 50 mg/M2 iv beginning on day 1 and repeated every 3 weeks for 8 courses). There were 42 males and 18 females, with a median age of 64 years (range, 40-74). The median performance status was 1. The histologic type was adenocarcinoma in 44 patients and undifferentiated carcinoma in 16 (27%). Three patients had locally advanced disease (5%) and 57 had metastatic disease (95%). Seven patients (12%) had received prior chemotherapy for advanced disease.
Results: All patients were assessable for toxicity and 55 for response (5 had insufficient treatment). Toxicity was mild or moderate, and there was no toxic death. Incidence of WHO toxicity > or = 2 was nausea and vomiting in 3%, mucositis in 3%, leukopenia in 7%, anemia in 3%, and thrombocytopenia in 2%. Port-a-Cath toxicity was thrombosis in 4, dislocation in 2 and infection in 3 patients. Seven complete responses and 13 partial responses (overall response rate, 36%) were achieved, with a response rate of 39% in untreated and 17% in pretreated patients. Nine patients (16%) had stable disease and 26 (47%) progressive disease. Most patients felt symptomatically improved on ECF.
Conclusions: Our study confirms that the ECF regimen has a favorable pattern of toxicity and is feasible on an outpatient basis. However, it did not confirm the high response rate reported in other phase II trials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030089160108700105 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Bonn, Germany.
Numerous drugs (including disease-modifying therapies, cognitive enhancers and neuropsychiatric treatments) are being developed for Alzheimer's and related dementias (ADRD). Emerging neuroimaging modalities, and genetic and other biomarkers potentially enhance diagnostic and prognostic accuracy. These advances need to be assessed in real-world studies (RWS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) associated with amyloid precursor protein (APP) duplications or presenilin (PSEN) variants increases risk of seizures. Targeting epileptiform activity with antiseizure medicine (ASM) administration to AD patients may beneficially attenuate cognitive decline (Vossel et al, JAMA Neurology 2021). However, whether mechanistically distinct ASMs differentially suppress seizures in discrete EOAD models is understudied (Lehmann et al, Neurochem Res 2021).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The LatAm-FINGERS trial marks a pioneering initiative as the first non-pharmacological clinical trial encompassing participants from 12 Latin American countries, including Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, and Uruguay. This initiative represents a significant advancement in promoting inclusivity and diversity in clinical trial recruitment, particularly in underserved populations.
Method: The LatAm-FINGERS trial is a multicenter randomized clinical trial evaluating a lifestyle intervention tailored for the Latin American population.
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA.
Background: Resource-constrained rural areas face significant challenges in providing access to healthcare resources, especially for older adults, including those living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementia (ADRD). We seek to address these gaps by equipping six rural community sites in New Hampshire and Maine with tele-rehabilitative equipment. Libraries and community centers that serves youth and older adults, vital in rural communities, are identified as key partners to advance digital health literacy, equity, and telemedicine services for older adults including those living with ADRD, with the University of [blind for review] Center for Digital Health Innovation (CDHI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.
Background: The recruitment of individuals for Alzheimer's disease (AD) genetic studies particularly those with low socioeconomic status, and living in rural areas remains a challenge in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), due to stigma-related cultural beliefs that hinder their participation. The Recruitment and Retention of Alzheimer's Disease Diversity Genetic Cohorts in the ADSP (READD - ADSP) project is a case-control genetic epidemiological study involving individuals who are living with AD and disease - free healthy control individuals. The aim is to build a resource that greatly expands Alzheimer's disease genetic studies in the currently underrepresented African ancestry populations and Hispanic/Latinx individuals.
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