Viewpoint in 2006

Filter By:

Article Type
Year
  • Older patients are less likely to receive standard treatments for cancer than similar younger patients. Arti Hurria proposes a specific oncology geriatric assessment, including functional status, comorbid medical conditions, nutritional status, cognitive function, psychological state and social support, and medication review, to pinpoint an individual's functional age and facilitate appropriate care.

    • Arti Hurria
    Viewpoint
  • Cancer incidence and mortality are expected to rise substantially in low-income countries. Franco Cavalli outlines how we should react to this threat, and gives guidance on preventive measures that can be tailored to different resource settings.

    • Franco Cavalli
    Viewpoint
  • The dilemma for those managing patients with cancer and neutropenia is whether the potential benefit of fluoroquinolones outweigh their disadvantages—drug resistance, toxicity and cost. The authors of this Viewpoint re-examine the question of who (if anyone) should receive fluoroquinolone prophylaxis.

    • Alison Freifeld
    • Kent Sepkowitz
    Viewpoint
  • Evidence gained in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is considered superior to that gained from associated epidemiological studies, but both types of study can be prone to error. Issues such as reproducibility, recall bias and duration are important factors that contribute to these errors, as discussed in this Viewpoint.

    • Gad Rennert
    Viewpoint
  • Developing chemotherapeutic regimens that can be given at the optimal dose and schedule continues to be one of the greatest challenges in clinical oncology. Simon and Norton discuss how they used guiding principles to derive the Norton–Simon hypothesis, and describe how this has improved clinical trial design and helped to achieve the goal of more effective and less toxic chemotherapeutic regimens.

    • Richard Simon
    • Larry Norton
    Viewpoint
  • Early treatment of pancreatic cancer increases the likelihood of survival, but detection of the disease is difficult in the early stages. The authors of this Viewpoint recommend screening populations at increased risk of developing pancreatic cancer because of family history, to identify early disease in a higher proportion of patients.

    • William Greenhalf
    • John P Neoptolemos
    Viewpoint
  • Although the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors gefitinib and erlotinib can produce dramatic and durable tumor responses, not all patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) benefit from these drugs. This Viewpoint discusses the molecular correlates of response for these agents in patients with NSCLC.

    • Jonathan E Dowell
    • John D Minna
    Viewpoint
  • When is chemotherapy too well tolerated? This Viewpoint discusses the possibilities that some patients receive inadequate doses of chemotherapy using the conventional dose calculation method based on body surface area and that a correlation between hematological toxicity and treatment efficacy could be used to titrate therapy.

    • Massimo Di Maio
    • Cesare Gridelli
    • Francesco Perrone
    Viewpoint
  • Glioblastoma multiforme (GMB) is a devastating neoplasm that nearly always culminates in death within 1–2 years of diagnosis. Despite decades of intensive clinical and laboratory research, progress has been slow, partly because of limited drug delivery and tumor heterogeneity. David Reardon describes an innovative chemoradiation approach that has improved overall survival for newly diagnosed GBM patients, and details a number of promising therapeutic strategies under evaluation.

    • David A Reardon
    Viewpoint
  • The Investigational New Drug (IND) process was established to ensure that the FDA is informed of any new treatment before use in humans. The process is now used for approval rather than notification. The time from conception to approval for a new drug is estimated at over 15 years, of which two-thirds is devoted to pre-IND testing. In the meantime the patient is denied access to the investigational treatment. A centralized IND procedure, when the public are already protected by processes within academic centers of excellence, is redundant and costs lives.

    • Emil J Freireich
    Viewpoint
  • Women withBRCA1/2mutations have a higher risk of breast and ovarian cancer than the general population. The authors outline current evidence for strategies to reduce the risks of cancer development in these women, and discuss future research directions.

    • Susan M Domchek
    • Katrina Armstrong
    • Barbara L Weber
    Viewpoint
  • In low-resource regions of the world, women with breast cancer often do not present themselves for treatment until the disease has reached an advanced stage. This article offers some cost-effective and practical recommendations for early detection, diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer in low-resource countries.

    • Benjamin O Anderson
    Viewpoint