OVARIAN CANCER and US: Dr Yi Pan

Blog Archives: Nov 2004 - present

#ovariancancers



Special items: Ovarian Cancer and Us blog best viewed in Firefox

Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Dr Yi Pan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Yi Pan. Show all posts

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Thursday, February 16, 2012

free book: Ovarian Cancer - Clinical and Therapeutic Perspectives | InTechOpen (includes the chapter on neuropathy by Dr Yi Pan)



free book: Ovarian Cancer - Clinical and Therapeutic Perspectives - InTechOpen

open access: Peripheral Neuropathy In Ovarian Cancer | InTechOpen (pdf file) - should be a priority read



Blogger's Note: should be a priority reading:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



 

Peripheral Neuropathy in Ovarian Cancer  

Yi Pan


Source: Ovarian Cancer - Clinical and Therapeutic Perspectives
ISBN 978-953-307-810-6
Edited by: Samir Farghaly
Publisher: InTech, February 2012



Peripheral Neuropathy in Ovarian Cancer

(Dr.) Yi Pan
Department of Neurology & Psychiatry, Saint Louis University
USA

1. Introduction

Peripheral neuropathy is not uncommon in ovarian cancer. The incidence density of peripheral neuropathy was 21.5 per 1000 person-years in ovarian cancer, 15.3 per 1000 person-years in breast cancer and 18.3 per 1000 person-years in lung cancer for patients who
received platinum-taxane combination chemotherapy (Nurgalieva et al., 2010).

Carboplatin/paclitaxel is the chemotherapy of choice for advanced ovarian cancer, which has been reported to associate with chemotherapy induced neurotoxicity in as high as 54% of patients after their first-line 6 cycles of treatment and with 23% of patients with residual neuropathy after a median follow up of 18 months (Pignata et al., 2006 ).

However, peripheral neuropathy in ovarian cancer is not always due to chemotherapeutic agents. Other etiologies of neuropathy in ovarian cancer patients are focal compression, nutritional
deficiency, ......cont'd


5. Conclusion

Peripheral neuropathy in ovarian cancer is complex. When patients develop neuropathy symptoms in ovarian cancer, we cannot simply conclude that it is chemotherapy-induce neuropathy. It is a challenge to treat this condition. Diagnosis of the etiology of the neuropathy, treating the underlying disease, correction of metabolic, nutritional, endocrine abnormalities, and decompression of the nerve entrapment will preserve nerve function. The goals of treatment are reduction of symptoms, improvement of function and patient’s quality of life.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Endometrioid ovarian carcinoma benefits from aromatase inhibitors: case report and literature review (abstract) Dr Yi Pan (author)



(case report/review) Conclusions Endometrioid ovarian carcinoma may benefit from aromatase inhibitors, especially when the tumour burden is low after primary chemotherapy or when the inhibitor is used as maintenance therapy between chemotherapies.