European journal of cancer : official journal for European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) [and] European Association for Cancer Research (EACR)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A single-blind study of the efficacy and safety of intravenous granisetron compared with alizapride plus dexamethasone in the prophylaxis and control of emesis in patients receiving 5-day cytostatic therapy. The Granisetron Study Group.
200 cancer patients who were due to receive fractionated chemotherapy (cisplatin greater than or equal to 15, ifosfamide greater than or equal to 1.2 or etoposide greater than or equal to 120, all mg/m2 per day) for 5 days, entered a multicentre study. Patients were randomised single-blind to receive either prophylactic intravenous granisetron (40 micrograms/kg) or alizapride (4 mg/kg followed by 4 mg/kg at 4 and 8 h post-treatment) plus dexamethasone 8 mg. Granistron was superior to the combination in preventing nausea and vomiting (54% vs. 43% complete responders). ⋯ Fewer patients receiving granisetron experienced adverse events (48% vs. 62%, P = 0.047). The frequency of constipation was, as expected, significantly higher in the granisetron group. Extrapyramidal effects, which were not noted by any granisetron patient, occurred in 5.3% of comparator patients.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Adjuvant chemotherapy for medulloblastoma: the first multi-centre control trial of the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP I).
Two hundred and eighty-six patients with medulloblastoma from 46 centres in 15 countries were treated in a prospective randomized trial designed to assess the value of adjuvant chemotherapy. All patients were treated by craniospinal irradiation. Those randomly allocated to receive adjuvant chemotherapy were given vincristine during irradiation and maintenance CCNU and vincristine, given in 6-weekly cycles, for 1 year. ⋯ Since then, late relapses have occurred in the chemotherapy arm and the statistically significant difference between the two groups has been lost. Although there is now no statistical difference between the two arms of the trial, a benefit for chemotherapy persists in a number of sub-groups; partial or sub-total surgery (P = 0.007), brainstem involvement (P = 0.001), and stage T3 and T4 disease (P = 0.002). A number of prognostic factors for medulloblastoma have emerged; sub-total resection, extent of disease and being male sex carry a poor prognosis.
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Blood transfusion and prognosis in Dukes' B and C colorectal cancer.
To evaluate the prognostic influence of blood transfusion in cancer patients, transfusion data were reviewed on 468 radically operated patients (260 Dukes' B and 208 Dukes' C) with carcinoma of the rectum and the rectosigmoid. Data on whole blood and packed red blood cell transfusions were recorded together with a number of clinical, pathological and histochemical characteristics. The endpoint used was death with cancer. ⋯ Univariate statistical methods revealed a highly significant trend towards worsened prognosis with increasing volume of transfusion blood. However, this effect was insignificant when multivariate statistical methods were employed: patients receiving whole blood or packed red blood cell transfusions did no worse than expected from their clinico-pathological characteristics. It is concluded that in this series the observed association between transfusion status and prognosis is adequately explained by a multivariate prognostic model including well-established prognostic factors.