OVARIAN CANCER and US

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

In health care, determining what’s unnecessary - The Washington Post (blog)



".......Despite all those hurdles, a new campaign called Choosing Wisely 
aims to answer just that question. Run by the American Board of Internal Medicine, Choosing Wisely has brought nine major medical societies on board to identify five common procedures that are often wasteful and unnecessary. The groups will provide their answers at the end of January and make them public in April......

abstract: Characteristics and management of adnexal masses in a canadian pediatric and adolescent population.



"(Results)....Surgical approaches included cystectomy, oophorectomy, or detorsion. Twelve percent of surgeries were for malignancies, representing 7.0% of all adnexal masses, and malignant masses were larger than benign masses (16.1 cm vs. 10.5 cm, P < 0.05)."

OBJECTIVE:

To determine whether there were differences in presentation, imaging, and tumour markers between pediatric and adolescent gynaecology patients with adnexal masses managed expectantly and those managed surgically.

METHODS:

We conducted a retrospective review of patients who presented to the pediatric and adolescent gynaecology service with adnexal masses between January 2003 and January 2006 at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children.

CONCLUSION:

Larger masses and masses associated with increased abdominal girth or abnormal tumour markers were more likely to be managed by surgical intervention. Surgically managed patients had more investigations. Forty-one percent of masses in patients referred to pediatric and adolescent gynaecology specialists resolved with expectant management.

The Rise of the e-Patient - slideshow - Pew Research



Targeted Cryoablation Boosts Survival in Ovarian Cancer



"......"This treatment is strictly to alleviate symptoms attributed to disease progression in a cost-effective manner," Dr. Bang explained. "Survival benefit is merely a direct effect in the efficacy of cryoablation, which was able to successfully ablate tumors in 98% of cases."..........

phase 11 - (Mayo) Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trial: Intra-op Detection of Occult Ovarian Carcinoma Using a Folate-Alpha Receptor Specific Fluorescent Ligand



Blogger's Note: as per criteria, recurrent ovarian cancer patients do not qualify for this study


Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials of self-expanding metallic stents as a bridge to surgery versus emergency surgery for malignant left-sided large bowel obstruction



Background:

Use of self-expanding metallic stents (SEMS) as a bridge to surgery has been suggested as an alternative management for acute malignant left-sided colonic obstruction, as emergency surgery has a high risk of morbidity and mortality. This meta-analysis evaluated high-quality evidence comparing preoperative SEMS with emergency surgery.

Results:

Four RCTs with 234 patients were included..........Three trials were stopped prematurely, one because the emergency surgery group had a significantly increased anastomotic leak rate, and two others because of stent-related complications and increased 30-day morbidity following SEMS management.......

abstract: Radioembolization for the Treatment of Liver Tumors: General Principles (primary & metastatic)



Abstract

Radioembolization aims to selectively target radiation to all liver tumors while limiting the dose to normal liver parenchyma. The deposition of yttrium-90 (90Y) microspheres delivered through the hepatic artery are preferentially implanted within liver tumors in a 3:1 to 20:1 ratio compared with a normal liver. The principles and mode of action of radioembolization are fundamentally different from the conventional embolization of liver tumors through transarterial embolization or chemoembolization.............The expanding literature on radioembolization shows that this is an effective treatment for the management of both primary and metastatic tumors.

open access: Integrin Inhibitors as a Therapeutic Agent for Ovarian Cancer (note also reference to Avastin)



Introduction

Ovarian cancer is a highly metastatic disease characterized by widespread peritoneal dissemination and ascites and is the leading cause of death from gynecologic malignancies. It is often diagnosed at a late stage after tumor cells are disseminated within the peritoneal cavity. Despite aggressive treatments which consist of surgical cytoreduction and chemotherapy, more than two-thirds of all patients succumb to the disease within 5 years [1]. The initial step of ovarian cancer metastasis is that cancer cells, detached from the ovarian surface epithelium, attach to the layer of mesothelial cells that line the inner surface of the peritoneum. Several integrins have been identified as important mediators of ovarian carcinoma metastasis to the mesothelium, suggesting that integrin inhibitors could be a new therapeutic strategy to prevent cancer cells from attaching onto the peritoneal cavity. During the last 10 years, novel insights into the mechanisms that regulate cell survival as well as cell migration and invasion have led to the development of novel integrin inhibitors for cancer treatments [2]. In this short review, we describe the critical roles of integrins during the metastatic process of ovarian carcinoma and discuss the potential of integrin inhibitors as a new therapeutic agent for the treatment of ovarian cancer.

2. Biology of IntegrinThe role of integrins in cell migration and invasion is one of their most studied functions in tumor biology [3, 4].....

    Table 1: Candidate integrin inhibitors for ovarian cancer treatment.

6. Conclusion:

Recognition of the need for cytoreduction along with the evolution of surgical techniques and the establishment of chemotherapy regimens through multiple clinical trials allows a majority of ovarian cancer patients to achieve “disease-free” status after the initial treatment. One of the major disappointments with the current ovarian cancer treatments is failure to achieve a complete cure, even in optimally debulked or chemosensitive patients. The establishment of efficacious consolidation or maintenance therapies would be a powerful tool for improving the miserable outcomes of patients with advanced-stage disease.The biological behavior of ovarian carcinoma is unique, differing from the classic and well-studied pattern of hematogenous metastasis found in most other cancers. Once ovarian cancer cells have detached as single cells or clusters from the primary ovarian tumor, they are carried by the physiological movement of peritoneal fluid and finally metastasize to the peritoneum and omentum, suggesting that the attachment of cancer cells onto the mesothelial cells covering the basement membrane is the initial key step in metastasis. Bevacizumab has already shown significant utility in ovarian cancer treatment not only in combination with current chemotherapy but also as a single agent, indicating that antiangiogenic therapy has considerable promise. Given that targeting integrins can affect not only the diverse functions of tumor cells, including adhesion, migration, invasion, proliferation, and survival, but also tumor microenvironments, especially the angiogenic endothelial cells, integrin inhibitors obviously have the potential for clinical use in the near future. Unfortunately, although several clinical trials have been attempted against ovarian cancer, no integrin inhibitor has shown sufficiently promising efficacy to progress to further clinical investigation; the agents targeting only a single integrin, such as αvβ3 and α5β1, failed to show evident clinical benefits in metastatic cancer treatment. In cancer progression, more than one integrin pathway is involved. For example, even if inhibition of the function of α5β1-integrin as a fibronectin receptor could be adequately achieved, the other integrins, such as αvβ3 or α3β1, would eventually compensate for its function. Therefore, a combination of different integrin receptor pathways is likely to be more effective in the clinical setting and should be explored for the future clinical application.
Collectively, although there remain many questions and challenges, integrin-targeted therapies continue to be a promising approach to improve the outcomes of women with ovarian cancer.

Ovarian Cancer and Us blog - top 10 geo locations (visitors to site)



  • United States (#1)

  • Russia

  • Germany

  • Bulgaria

  • France

  • Ukraine

  • United Kingdom

  • Canada

  • India

  • Italy (#10)

Ovarian Cancer and Us blog - 5 most viewed pages - articles of interest (a bit odd)




Pageviews last month:
10,085



open access: Ovarian Steroid Cell Tumour: Correlation of Histopathology with Clinicopathologic Features - Jnl Pathology Research International



abstract: Ovarian steroid cell tumor with biallelic adenomatous polyposis coli inactivation in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)



"Our findings provide the first evidence that ovarian steroid cell tumors may be an extracolonic manifestation of FAP (familial adenomatous polyposis - colorectal cancer syndrome) and implicate β-catenin activation as an oncogenic mechanism in ovarian steroid cell tumorigenesis."

abstract: Reference ranges for HE4 and CA125 in a large Asian population by automated assays and diagnostic performances for ovarian cancer



"The new automated HE4 assay showed good analytical and diagnostic performances. The reference limits established in our study could be used as cutoff levels to facilitate more accurate diagnosis of ovarian cancer in Asian population."

abstract: Aspirin, Nonaspirin Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs, or Acetaminophen and Risk of Ovarian Cancer.



BACKGROUND:

Aspirin, nonaspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NA-NSAIDs) and acetaminophen all have biologic effects that might reduce the risk of ovarian cancer. However, epidemiologic data on this question are mixed.

CONCLUSIONS:

Risk reductions of ovarian cancer were observed with use of aspirin or selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors. However, the results should be interpreted with caution due to the inherent study limitations and biases.

open access: PLoS ONE: Whole Brain Radiation-Induced Impairments in Learning and Memory Are Time-Sensitive and Reversible by Systemic Hypoxia



"Close to 1.6 million new cases of cancer [1] and 64,530 primary brain tumors are expected to be diagnosed in the United States in 2011 [2]. The most common form of treatment for metastatic or primary tumors located in brain regions that are difficult to surgically remove continues to be whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT) [3]. Although this treatment regimen is effective in eliminating tumors, damage to normal brain tissue is inevitable. Several studies have shown that cognitive deficits occur in a relatively large percentage of brain tumor survivors, becoming evident months to years after treatment [3][6]......"

article: New York Times - Is it possible to predict when a patient will die?



preview: RAF around the Edges — The Paradox of BRAF Inhibitors — NEJM



RAF around the Edges — The Paradox of BRAF Inhibitors

N Engl J Med 2012; 366:271-273January 19, 2012

This article has no abstract; the first 100 words appear below.

The recent success of BRAF inhibitors represents a great stride forward for melanoma research. When used to treat patients with melanoma who harbor the BRAF V600E mutation, these inhibitors lead to the remission of even advanced lesions. However, resistance to BRAF inhibitors emerges within months. Of added concern is the development of secondary tumors, most commonly cutaneous squamous-cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas, in response to BRAF inhibition.1 In this issue of the Journal, Su et al. found that BRAF inhibition leads to increased MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) signaling and secondary tumor development when another oncogene, HRAS, is activated.2 This is due . . .

(original article/abstract) RAS Mutations in Cutaneous Squamous-Cell Carcinomas in Patients Treated with BRAF Inhibitors — NEJM



Finding philanthropy: Like it? Pay for it : Nature News & Comment ('crowd funding')



The hard sell

Another objection to crowd-funding may be harder to shake. To sell a project, researchers need an attention-grabbing story (see ‘How to woo the crowd’). That is easy to construct if your subject of study is, say, saving pandas or curing cancer. It is less so for researchers working on polymers. So will crowd-funding prove profitable only for 'sexy' science?

Physician Guilty of Medicare Fraud Put Patients at Risk - Trampling the Hippocratic Oath "On the Way to the Bank"



US Deaths Resulting From Inpatient Surgery Decline



 "January 18, 2012 — The number of surgical procedures performed in the United States increased between 1996 and 2006, whereas inpatient postsurgical deaths within 30 days of admission dropped significantly, according to a national, population-level analysis published  (abstract) in the February issue of Surgery....."

".....In 2006, more patients had sepsis or pneumonia than in 1996, and the absolute number of deaths resulting from complications increased. However, the failure-to-rescue rate declined during the study period for both groups (sepsis, from 18.69% to 14.03%; pneumonia, from 8.54% to 7.34%). Meanwhile, the number of deaths resulting from deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and shock declined during the study period.
Overall, the number of patients with 1 to 5 complications increased, but the failure-to-rescue rate for patients with an identified complication decreased from 12.10% to 9.84% (P < .001)
"The decline in the number of deaths may have occurred through reduced mortality of individual procedures, reductions in the volume of high-risk procedures, and the rescue of patients who had a complication," the authors write.
They estimate that 51,000 fewer people died in 2006 than would have with the 1996 mortality rate. However, they also note that some portion of the decline in mortality "may represent the effect of premature discharge as opposed to an actual improvement in survival." Data were not linked across admissions, and a patient discharged postoperatively who was later readmitted with a complication and died would not be counted as a death in this study."

abstract: Exposure to and Intention to Discuss Cancer-Related Internet Information Among Patients With Breast Cancer (Sloan Kettering)



Patients and Methods:
We asked 558 patients with breast cancer who were waiting to see their physicians about their experiences reading cancer-related information from the Internet and their intent to discuss the information in their current visit.

Conclusion:
The proportion of patients with breast cancer planning to discuss Internet information during their current physician visit was relatively small. Few characteristics were associated with recent Internet use or intent to discuss.

abstract: Variation and Consternation: Access to Unfunded Cancer Drugs in Canada



".... The majority of respondents felt all methods of accessing unfunded intravenous cancer drugs should be available (76% in their own center; 60% in private clinics) and used these methods to access these medications (81% in their own institution; 62% in private clinics)...."



Conclusion:
Access to effective but unfunded cancer drugs varies across Canada. Policymakers need to consider whether this is consistent with articulated values of the system and whether currently planned processes address these inconsistencies. Key stakeholders need to consider the merits of the different means of accessing these drugs to appropriately and fairly integrate access into publically funded health care systems like that of Canada and other systems like that of the United States, which could face similar limits in the future.

abstract: Prevalence of Self-Reported Memory Problems in Adult Cancer Survivors: A National Cross-Sectional Study



Conclusion:
Cancer history independently predicted SRM impairment. Prevalence of SRM (self-reported memory) impairment in people with a history of cancer/cancer treatment is substantial and increasing. Health care providers should assess and be ready to treat memory impairment in patients with a history of cancer.

Improving Wait Time for Chemotherapy in an Outpatient Clinic at a Comprehensive Cancer Center (MDA)



"Purpose:
We conducted our study at the Ambulatory Treatment Center (ATC) of the MD Anderson Cancer Center, a network of six outpatient treatment units for patients receiving infusion therapies. Excessive patient wait time for chemotherapy was a primary source of ATC patient dissatisfaction. ATC employees expressed frustration, because often, patients arrived physically on time but were not treatment ready. Additionally, ATC staff emphasized challenges associated with obtaining finalized treatment orders for prescheduled appointments (ie, placeholder appointments without associated physician treatment orders). We aimed to decrease mean patient wait time from check-in to treatment in one ATC unit by 25%."

JMIR-Results of an Online Community (FORCE) Needs Assessment for Psychoeducational Interventions Among Partners of Hereditary Breast Cancer Previvors and Survivors (specifically breast cancer)



Clinical Characteristics
"Clinical characteristics assessed included whether respondents’ partners had a diagnosis of breast cancer, had been tested for a BRCA1/2 genetic mutation, and had surgery to remove her breasts (ie, prophylactic mastectomy) or ovaries (ie, prophylactic oophorectomy), or for breast reconstruction. Based on these items, 3 variables were created to indicate whether each respondent’s partner had (1) a diagnosis of breast cancer, (2) received BRCA1/2 genetic testing, and (3) undergone any of the 3 surgery types we inquired about."

abstract: RAS Mutations Are Associated With the Development of Cutaneous Squamous Cell Tumors in Patients Treated With RAF Inhibitors (vemurafenib/sorafenib/secondary malignancies)



"Purpose 
RAF inhibitors are effective against melanomas with BRAF V600E mutations but may induce keratoacanthomas (KAs) and cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (cSCCs). The potential of these agents to promote secondary malignancies is concerning. We analyzed cSCC and KA lesions for genetic mutations in an attempt to identify an underlying mechanism for their formation.
Methods
Four international centers contributed 237 KA or cSCC tumor samples from patients receiving an RAF inhibitor (either vemurafenib or sorafenib; n = 19) or immunosuppression therapy (n = 53) or tumors that developed spontaneously (n = 165)........."

abstract: Longitudinal Assessment of Chemotherapy-Induced Structural Changes in Cerebral White Matter and Its Correlation With Impaired Cognitive Functioning



Conclusion
We report evidence of longitudinal changes in cognitive functioning and cerebral WM (white matter) integrity after chemotherapy as well as an association between both.

open access: JCO - “Doctor, Will the Treatment You Are Recommending Cause Chemobrain?”



"For more than a decade, patients and their oncologists have been sharing conversations about cognitive complaints after chemotherapy treatment.1 Early on, only occasional patients complained of trouble with concentration and memory during treatment, with a minority noting persistence beyond the end of treatment. The oncologist, who rarely heard this complaint, could be dismissive, saying that the drugs the patient received did not cross the blood-brain barrier, and therefore, it was unlikely that the difficulties were related to the cancer treatment........."

press release: Novel gene mutations associated with bile duct cancer (a Lynch Syndrome associated cancer)



"...Cancers of the gallbladder and bile duct are diagnosed in 12,000 patients in the U.S. each year, the authors note; but only 10 percent are discovered early enough to allow successful surgical treatment. Chemotherapy is modestly effective, leading to an average survival time of less than one year....."

open access: Managing pregnant women with cancer: personal considerations and a review of the literature



selected section: 

Gynecological tumours

Cervical and less commonly ovarian cancers have been diagnosed in women during their pregnancy course. Given their anatomical location, their treatment represents a major challenge. Pelvic surgery remains very challenging during pregnancy as the access is impaired and thus an optimum oncological resection is technically very difficult to achieve [19]. Thus, surgery should not be considered outside centres with experience dealing with pregnant cancer patients. Pelvic radiotherapy should be avoided during gestation, as the risk of foetal loss or malformations are significant [8]. Elective abortion should thus be considered during the first trimester, if the clinical situation mandates a prompt treatment.
A recent systematic review has identified 16, 18, and 20 patients treated with chemotherapy for cervical, non-epithelial and epithelial ovarian cancer, respectively [8]. Concomitant cisplatin and radiotherapy was frequently considered in cervical cancer patients, but spontaneous abortion was encountered in all patients exposed to radiotherapy; cases treated with weekly cisplatin alone had a normal pregnancy outcome. For non-epithelial ovarian cancer, 15/18 cases did not show any signs of pregnancy complications. In the remaining three cases, pregnancy complications were successfully managed with no foetal abnormalities documented. The most frequently used regimen was BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin), which is also considered as the gold standard treatment for non-pregnant women. The combination of paclitaxel and carboplatin was also frequently reported in managing epithelial ovarian cancer during pregnancy, with no serious complications reported.

What Is the Current Standard of Care for Anti-HER2 NEOADJUVANT Therapy in Breast Cancer?



Researchers find discordance between standard human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) testing and HER2 status reported on Oncotype DX



"“Our study on HER2 discordance highlights the fact that one test cannot provide all the answers [regarding optimal treatment for women with breast cancer]. The oncology community needs to continue using the validated HER2 assays in clinical treatment decisions and reexamine their overreliance on the Oncotype DX test,” Dr. Bhargava says.
Dr. Hayes agrees, noting that the Oncotype DX HER2 assay was not developed, validated, or approved as a predictive test to determine which patients should receive anti-HER2 therapies."

Women of Teal: HopeNet Social Network to be Discontinued- 1/1/12



Myriad Genetics Gets (Worldwide) Rights To RAD51C Gene



"...Through this agreement, Myriad has obtained an exclusive, world-wide license, with co-exclusivity in Germany, to provide commercial testing for RAD51C."

Hereditary ovarian cancer: Beyond the usual suspects - abstract (Fanconi anemia–BRCA,PARP, RAD51C, RAD51D,BRIP1



Blogger's Note: see post Myriad Genetics  rights/RAD51C

.....With at least 16 genes implicated in hereditary ovarian cancer to date, comprehensive testing for ovarian cancer risk will require assessment of many genes........ In addition, identifying inherited mutations in a variety of FA–BRCA pathway genes may aid in identifying individuals who will selectively benefit from PARP inhibitors."

Highlights

► Newly identified hereditary ovarian cancer genes include RAD51C, RAD51D, and BRIP1.
► Many genes in the Fanconi anemia–BRCA pathway may increase risk of ovarian cancer.
► New genomic technologies make comprehensive genetic assessment feasible.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Ovarian Cancer and Us - blacked out



blacked out

SOPA blackout: Who’s gone dark to protest anti-piracy bills?



abstract: Extraperitoneal Metastases From Recurrent Ovarian Cancer (stage 111 ovarian cancer patients)



International Journal of Gynecological Cancer:
January 2012 - Volume 22 - Issue 1 - p 43–46
doi: 10.1097/IGC.0b013e31823532ce
Ovarian Cancer

Extraperitoneal Metastases From Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

Robinson, William R. MD*; Beyer, Julie RN, BSN; Griffin, Stephen MD; Kanjanavaikoon, Paiyarut MD

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Abstract

Objectives: To identify patterns of metastasis in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer. The influence of the route of chemotherapy administration and sequence of agents on those patterns is also examined.

Results: Thirty-five subjects developed extraperitoneal recurrent ovarian cancer, with 26 subjects (74%) after IP treatment, and 9 subjects (26%) after IV treatment. Of these extraperitoneal recurrences, 26 were in the thoracic/pulmonary cavity, 7 were within the central nervous system (CNS), and 2 were in the cutaneous tissues. The CNS and cutaneous lesions were secondary recurrences, and all occurred in subjects who had initially received IP cisplatin/paclitaxel followed by IV BEV for recurrent disease.

Conclusions: Extraperitoneal recurrences were more common in women treated with IP chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. Specifically, women treated with IV BEV as secondary therapy after IP were at particularly high risk of extraperitoneal metastases, including in the CNS and cutaneous tissues. Physicians should be aware of the possibility of unusual metastases after the combination of IP chemotherapy and BEV, and future prospective studies of this population should carefully evaluate recurrence site patterns.

Firefox - Why is the Internet on strike today?‏



Today, Mozilla is joining the virtual strike against Internet censorship – along with others like Wikipedia and Google – to raise awareness of US Congress legislation that could fundamentally alter the Internet we know and love.

This harmful legislation, called the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) in the Senate, will be voted on as early as January 24th in the Senate.

If you live in the US, there's still time to help stop these bills from becoming law. Please visit mozilla.org/sopa for information on the bill, and on ways you can reach out to your senators.

What makes this legislation so bad? Here's how it would change the Web:......

The Oncologist: Immunogenicity of an Inactivated Monovalent 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) Vaccine in Patients Who Have Cancer (prospective single site study + 2 related articles))



Blogger's Note: reminder - full access requires subscription ($$$); note also related articles 

Abstract  
Background. The immune response of patients who have cancer, who may be receiving immunosuppressive therapy, is generally considered to be decreased. This study aimed to evaluate the immune response of cancer patients to the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) vaccine.

COMMENTARY
Vaccination of Oncology Patients: An Effective Tool and an Opportunity Not to Be Missed
Camille N. Kotton, Mark C. Poznansky
Oncologist published 12 January 2012, 10.1634/theoncologist.2011-0383
http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/cgi/reprint/theoncologist.2011-0383v1
.......................................................................................
OUTCOMES RESEARCH: CASE REPORT
Immunogenicity of an Inactivated Monovalent 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) Vaccine in Patients Who Have Cancer
Yiqing Xu, Nanda Methuku, Praveena Coimbatore, Theresa Fitzgerald, Yiwu Huang, Ying-Yi Xiao, Murali Pagala, Shachi Gupta, William Solomon, Philip Rubin, John Treanor, Alan Astrow, Howard Minkoff, Jay S. Cooper
Oncologist published 12 January 2012, 10.1634/theoncologist.2011-0220
http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/cgi/content/abstract/theoncologist.2011-0220v1







ecancernews: Researchers defend HRT breast cancer (The Million Women Study)study