Annals of palliative medicine
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Clinical characteristics and treatment of critically ill patients with COVID-19 in Hebei.
In December, 2019, a novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) emerged in Wuhan, China. We aimed to clarify the epidemiology, laboratory examinations, imaging findings, and treatment of critically ill patients with COVID-19 in Hebei province, China. ⋯ COVID-19 patients who had underlying diseases and longer confirmation times were more likely to progress to critically severe COVID-19. These patients also presented with a higher risk of respiratory depression, circulatory collapse, extrapulmonary complications, and infection.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Pragmatic Clinical Trial
Early palliative care and quality of life of advanced cancer patients-a multicenter randomized clinical trial.
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Multicenter Study
PROutine: a feasibility study assessing surveillance of electronic patient reported outcomes and adherence via smartphone app in advanced cancer.
In advanced cancer, quality of life (QoL) is a major treatment goal. In order to achieve this, the identification of suffering by screening for patient-reported-outcomes (PROs, i.e., symptoms) is of utmost importance. The use of paper-pencil questionnaires is associated with significant shortcomings due to missing data, recall bias and transcription errors. Other than that, the electronic recording of PROs by mobile Health (mHealth) offers a number of advantages. The aim of this study was to test whether the routine assessment of PROs via a newly developed smartphone application (MeQoL®) is feasible. ⋯ Even though participants were asked to record PROs rather frequently (daily), missing data were low and patient satisfaction was high. Having in mind the findings of other working groups, such routine implementation of mHealth solutions may substantially improve outcomes of cancer therapy and increase the value of trials' findings. For the individual patient, MeQoL® allows for monitoring adherence to pharmacotherapy and can facilitate patient guidance.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Gender differences in pain and patient reported outcomes: a secondary analysis of the NCIC CTG SC. 23 randomized trial.
Gender differences may contribute to variations in disease presentations and health outcomes. To explore the gender difference in pain and patient reported outcomes in cancer patients with bone metastases undergoing palliative radiotherapy on the National Cancer Institute of Canada (NCIC) SC.23 randomized trial. ⋯ In cancer patients with bone metastases undergoing palliative radiotherapy, the majority of symptom presentations, patient reported outcomes, and response to radiation was not significantly different between genders.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Genetic biomarkers associated with pain flare and dexamethasone response following palliative radiotherapy in patients with painful bone metastases.
In patients who receive palliative radiation therapy (RT) for painful bone metastases, 40% experience a transient increase in pain known as a pain flare. Prophylactic dexamethasone has been shown to reduce pain flare incidence to 25%. We aimed to identify DNA biomarkers associated with pain flare and dexamethasone response. ⋯ Significant SNVs associated with pain flare were found in genes with functions in biosynthesis (DHODH, PECR), lipid excretion and metabolism (UGT2A1/2, VLDLR), and intracellular signalling (DNM2, SEC23A). Significant SNVs associated with dexamethasone response were from genes involved in extracellular matrix (HAS1, ADAMTS16) and cytoskeleton regulation (GAS2L2). Identification of SNVs predictive of pain flare and dexamethasone response enables targeted prophylactic therapy according to a patient's predisposed response.