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Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common dose-limiting side effect of taxane and platinum chemotherapy for breast cancer. Clinicians cannot accurately predict CIPN severity partly because its pathophysiology is poorly understood. Although inflammation may play a role in CIPN, there are limited human studies. Here, we identified the strongest predictors of CIPN using variables measured before taxane- or platinum-based chemotherapy, including serum inflammatory markers.

116 sedentary women with breast cancer (mean age 55years) rated (1) numbness and tingling and (2) hot/coldness in hands/feet on 0-10 scales before and after 6weeks of taxane- or platinum-based chemotherapy. A sub-study was added to collect cytokine data in the final 55 patients. We examined all linear models to predict CIPN severity at 6weeks using pre-chemotherapy assessments of inflammatory, behavioral, clinical, and psychosocial factors. find more The final model was selected via goodness of fit.

The strongest pre-chemotherapy predictors of numbness and tingling were worse fatigue/anxiety/depression (explaining 27% of variance), older age (9%), and baseline neuropathy (5%). The strongest predictors of hot/coldness in hands/feet were worse baseline neuropathy (11%) and fatigue/anxiety/depression (6%). Inflammation was a risk for CIPN, per more pro-inflammatory IFN-γ (12%) and IL-1β (6%) and less anti-inflammatory IL-10 (6%) predicting numbness/tingling and more IFN-γ (17%) and less IL-10 (9%) predicting hot/coldness in hands/feet.

The strongest pre-chemotherapy predictors of CIPN included worse fatigue/anxiety/depression and baseline neuropathy. A pro-inflammatory state also predicted CIPN. Because this is an exploratory study, these results suggest specific outcomes (e.g., IL-1β) and effect size estimates for designing replication and extension studies.

NCT00924651.

NCT00924651.

Studies have shown that screen detection by national screening programs is independently associated with better prognosis of breast cancer. The aim of this study is to evaluate the association between tumor biology according to the 70-gene signature (70-GS) and survival of patients with screen-detected and interval breast cancers.

All Dutch breast cancer patients enrolled in the MINDACT trial (EORTC-10041/BIG3-04) accrued 2007-2011, who participated in the national screening program (biennial screening, ages 50-75) were included (n = 1102). Distant Metastasis-Free Interval (DMFI) was evaluated according to the 70-GS for patients with screen-detected (n = 754) and interval cancers (n = 348).

Patients with screen-detected cancers had 8-year DMFI rates of 98.2% for 70-GS ultralow-, 94.6% for low-, and 93.8% for high-risk tumors (p = 0.4). For interval cancers, there was a significantly lower 8-year DMFI rate for patients with 70-GS high-risk tumors (85.2%) compared to low- (92.2%) and ultralow-risk tumors (97.4%, p = 0.0023). Among patients with 70-GS high-risk tumors, a significant difference in 8-year DMFI rate was observed between interval (85.2%, n = 166) versus screen-detected cancers (93.8%, n = 238; p = 0.002) with a HR of 2.3 (95%CI 1.2-4.4, p = 0.010) adjusted for clinical-pathological characteristics and adjuvant systemic treatment.

Among patients with 70-GS high-risk tumors, a significant difference in DMFI was observed between screen-detected and interval cancers, suggesting that method of detection is an additional prognostic factor in this subgroup and should be taken into account when deciding on adjuvant treatment strategies.

Among patients with 70-GS high-risk tumors, a significant difference in DMFI was observed between screen-detected and interval cancers, suggesting that method of detection is an additional prognostic factor in this subgroup and should be taken into account when deciding on adjuvant treatment strategies.It is difficult to manage postoperative blood glucose levels without hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia in cardiac surgery patients even if continuous intravenous insulin infusion is used. Therefore, the insulin requirements for maintaining normoglycemia may be difficult to evaluate and need to be elucidated. In this single-center retrospective study, 30 adult patients (age 71.5 ± 9.0 years old, men 67%, BMI 22.0 ± 3.1 kg/m2, diabetes 33%) who underwent cardiac surgery and used bedside artificial pancreas (STG-55) as a perioperative glycemic control were included. We investigated the insulin and glucose requirements to maintain normoglycemia until the day after surgery. The bedside artificial pancreas achieved intensive glycemic control without hypoglycemia under fasting conditions for 15 h after surgery (mean blood glucose level was 103.3 ± 3.1 mg/dL and percentage of time in range (70-140 mg/dL) was 99.4 ± 2.0%). The total insulin requirement for maintaining normoglycemia differed among surgical procedures, including the use of cardiopulmonary bypass during surgery, while it was not affected by age, body mass index, or the capacity of insulin secretion. Moreover, the mean insulin requirement and the standard deviation of the insulin requirements were variable and high, especially during the first several hours after surgery. Treatment using the bedside artificial pancreas enabled intensive postoperative glycemic control without hypoglycemia. Furthermore, the insulin requirements for maintaining normoglycemia after cardiac surgery vary based on surgical strategies and change dynamically with postoperative time, even in the short term.

Electroretinogram (ERG) plays an essential role in the diagnosis of retinal disease. Choosing appropriate methods could extract valuable information from ERG. In this study, a new criterion based on time-frequency domain analysis was proposed to investigate the retina in retinitis pigmentosa (RP) patients.

The total number of 16 eyes from eight RP patients and 20 eyes from age-matched healthy subjects were assessed. The signals included photopic and scotopic ERGs. Continuous wavelet transform was applied to ERGs. Dominant frequencies were extracted, and the contours related to these dominant frequencies were selected. As a new criterion, the areas related to dominant frequency contours were considered a feature to differentiate the RP and normal groups. To better evaluate the proposed criterion results, the time-domain analysis characteristics of ERG were also considered.

The results showed an increase in implicit time and reduced amplitude in RP patients (P < 0.05). A significant decrease of dominant frequencies and increasing their occurrence time were seen in ERG of RP patients.

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