The lancet oncology
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Up to 80% of patients with rectal cancer undergo sphincter-preserving surgery. It is widely accepted that up to 90% of such patients will subsequently have a change in bowel habit, ranging from increased bowel frequency to faecal incontinence or evacuatory dysfunction. This wide spectrum of symptoms after resection and reconstruction of the rectum has been termed anterior resection syndrome. ⋯ This disordered bowel function has a substantial negative effect on quality of life. Previous reviews have mainly focused on different colonic reconstructive configurations and their comparative effects on daily function and quality of life. The present Review explores the potential mechanisms underlying disturbed functions, as well as current, novel, and future treatment options.
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The lancet oncology · Sep 2012
ReviewTargeted gene delivery by free-tissue transfer in oncoplastic reconstruction.
Surgery is the most effective curative treatment for various tumour types. Despite a current preference for conservative surgery, radical excision retains a clearly defined role in modern management of locoregional disease. ⋯ Several promising therapeutic strategies, including virus-directed enzyme prodrug therapy, genetic radionuclide therapy, and free-flap radioprotection, have the potential to extend the role of the free flap beyond its immediate goal of restoring form and function to patients, but challenges exist. Work to translate therapeutic free-tissue transfer from preclinical study to clinical use is in progress.
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The lifetime risk of having epileptic seizures is profoundly increased in patients with cancer: about 20% of all patients with systemic cancer may develop brain metastases. These patients and those with primary brain tumours have a lifetime risk of epilepsy of 20-80%. ⋯ The management of epilepsy in patients with cancer includes diagnosis and treatment of the underlying cerebral pathological changes, secondary prophylaxis with antiepileptic drugs, and limiting of the effect of epilepsy and its treatment on the efficacy and tolerability of anticancer treatments, cognitive function, and quality of life. Because of the concern of drug-drug interactions, the pharmacological approach to epilepsy requires a multidisciplinary approach, specifically in a setting of rapidly increasing choices of agents both to treat cancer and cancer-associated epilepsy.
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The lancet oncology · Sep 2012
ReviewReal-time tumour tracking in particle therapy: technological developments and future perspectives.
A key challenge in radiation oncology is accurate delivery of the prescribed dose to tumours that move because of respiration. Tumour tracking involves real-time target localisation and correction of radiation beam geometry to compensate for motion. ⋯ Target localisation and motion compensation methods applied in x-ray photon radiotherapy require careful performance assessment for clinical applications in particle therapy. In this Review, we summarise the efforts required for an application of real-time tumour tracking in particle therapy, by comparing and assessing competing strategies for time-resolved target localisation and related clinical outcomes in x-ray radiation oncology.
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Most endometrial carcinomas are diagnosed at an early stage. Still, 15-20% of these carcinomas recur with limited effect of systemic therapies in metastatic disease. Improved ability to target surgical and systemic therapies to well selected patient populations will increase the likelihood of benefits. ⋯ No new targeted treatments are available in the clinic, but recent comprehensive molecular characterisations of tumours have identified drugs targeting the PI3K/PTEN/AKT/mTOR pathway and fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) 2 as promising for further studies, also reflected in current clinical trials investigating endometrial carcinoma. A more systematic approach to integration of biomarkers in surgical trials and clinical trials of therapeutics, earlier characterisation and standardisation of diagnostic imaging and biomarker assessment, and prospective implementation studies are needed for clinical implementation. We summarise the present knowledge regarding biomarkers in endometrial carcinoma, assessing how such markers could be applied to address key clinical challenges for the treatment of this disease.