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Englert M, Ronson A, Lossignol D, Body JJ. [Terminal medical interventions: psychosocial, medical, ethical and legal aspects]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 2001; 22:93-9. [PMID: 11388029] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/20/2023]
Abstract
We give an overview of the available medical solutions to help a patient with refractory symptoms at the end of his life. Patient "competence" must first be evaluated and, even if their diagnosis is difficult, organic mental disorders and depression must be diagnosed and adequately treated to allow a real, personal and honest dialog. Administration of high doses of morphine is frequently used at the end of life not only to fully relieve pain but also to accelerate death, even if this is not clearly stated. This technique is not devoid of hypocrisy and high doses of morphine can have quite unpleasant side effects. Treatment withdrawal or withholding is generally not sufficient to allow a correct end of life. The arrest of ventilation, dialysis, artificial nutrition and even more hydration must often be coupled with techniques inducing unconsciousness, which makes imprecise the limits between such a "passive" ending of life and "active" euthanasia. The technique of terminal sedation, frequently based on the use of midazolam, has been more recently introduced in some palliative care units. Such a "controlled sedation" is supposed to allow a "natural" death by inducing a profound sleep. In opposition with active euthanasia, which allows a quiet and rapid death at a moment chosen by the patient himself, this technique of "sedation" has an undetermined duration, has legal implications which could be viewed as quite similar as the ones of euthanasia, and, moreover, this prolonged agony can be extremely stressful and distressing for the family. Medical-assisted suicide is allowed in The Netherlands under the same conditions as euthanasia. Death is generally obtained after a few hours but the technique is not always successful and the process of death can sometimes be prolonged and uncomfortable. This technique can nevertheless be preferred by some physicians and patients. As compared to active euthanasia, the proportion of medically-assisted suicides (1/6) is low in The Netherlands. Euthanasia is the only technique able to induce a peaceful and rapid death. The proportion of various techniques to actively induce death is probably quite similar in our country than in The Netherlands but, most of the time, these interventions occur at the very end of life when the patient is no longer able to participate in the decision process and thus occur without his explicit request. We think that, as for all medical decisions, the use of one or the other of these various techniques should be selected after a quiet and free discussion between the patient and his physician, preferably in advance and not in a situation of emergency and panic.
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Abstract
Breast cancer frequently spreads to bone and is almost always associated with osteolysis. This tumor-induced osteolysis is caused by increased osteoclastic bone resorption. Bisphosphonates are used successfully to inhibit bone resorption in tumor bone disease and may prevent development of new osteolytic lesions. The classical view is that bisphosphonates only act on bone cells. We investigated their effects on breast cancer cells using three human cell lines, namely, MCF-7, T47D, and MDA.MB.231, and we tested four structurally different bisphosphonates: clodronate, pamidronate, ibandronate, and zoledronate. We performed time course studies for each bisphosphonate at various concentrations and found that all four compounds induced a nonreversible growth inhibition in both MCF-7 and T47D cell lines in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The MDA.MB.231 cell line was less responsive. Bisphosphonates induced apoptosis in MCF-7 and cell necrosis in T47D cells. The inhibition of MCF-7 cell proliferation could be reverted almost completely by the benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe)-fluoromethyl ketone (z-VAD-fmk) inhibitor of caspases, suggesting that the apoptotic process observed in the MCF-7 cell line is mediated, at least partly, by the caspase system. Caspase activity was little changed by bisphosphonates in T47D cells and the inhibitor of caspase did not modify bisphosphonates effects. In summary, we found that bisphosphonates inhibit breast cancer cell growth by inducing cell death in vitro. Such effects could contribute to the beneficial role of bisphosphonates in the treatment and the prevention of tumor-induced osteolysis.
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Reginster JY, Bruyere O, Audran M, Avouac B, Body JJ, Bouvenot G, Brandi ML, Gennari C, Kaufman JM, Lemmel EM, Vanhaelst L, Weryha G, Devogelaer JP. Do estrogens effectively prevent osteoporosis-related fractures? The Group for the Respect of Ethics and Excellence in Science. Calcif Tissue Int 2000; 67:191-4. [PMID: 10954771 DOI: 10.1007/s002230001135] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
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Body JJ, Louviaux I, Dumon JC. Decreased efficacy of bisphosphonates for recurrences of tumor-induced hypercalcemia. Support Care Cancer 2000; 8:398-404. [PMID: 10975689 DOI: 10.1007/s005200050008] [Citation(s) in RCA: 28] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
Abstract
Bisphosphonates are now the standard treatment for tumor-induced hypercalcemia (TIH), and pamidronate can normalize serum Ca in at least 90% of the patients treated for the first time. However, there are few data on the treatment of TIH when it recurs, and published results are contradictory. We studied 29 patients with solid tumors, 14 of whom had breast cancer and all of whom were naive to bisphosphonate therapy. They were retreated with pamidronate (median dose 1 mg/kg for both courses) for recurrence of TIH after a median interval of 78 (range 7-297) days. Fourteen of them, 7 of whom had breast cancer, were treated a third time 28 (range 5-79) days after the second course (median dose of pamidronate 1.5 mg/kg). Baseline Ca levels were not significantly different before each course, but the nadirs after each treatment progressively increased, 9.3 +/- 0.2 mg/dl, 10.5 +/- 0.3 mg/dl, and 12.3 +/- 0.4 mg/dl after the 1st, 2nd and 3rd administrations, respectively (P<0.05). The percentage of treatment failures also progressively increased: 10%, 31% and 85% (P< 0.05). This decreased hypocalcemic effect was essentially observed in patients without bone metastases or with tumors other than breast cancer. Thus, in patients without bone metastases, Ca levels did not decrease at all after the 3rd course, whereas the responses were not significantly different between the three courses in patients with bone metastases. Baseline urinary hydroxyproline, a marker of bone resorption, increased progressively from course to course, especially in patients with bone metastases or breast cancer, but this was not the case for parameters of bone formation. There was also a progressive increase in PTHrP levels accompanied by an increase in the number of patients with enhanced kidney reabsorption of Ca and a decrease in the threshold for Pi excretion, which was significant in patients without bone metastases. In conclusion, pamidronate was progressively less efficient when hypercalcemia recurred. This was observed mainly in patients with hypercalcemia of humoral origin. Tumor progression is accompanied by an enhanced release of osteolytic factors, notably PTHrP, that increase bone resorption and enhance kidney calcium reabsorption, especially in patients without bone metastases. When both phenomena occur, the response to bisphosphonates becomes minimal and the usefulness of therapy questionable.
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Abstract
The occurrence of undesirable side effects due to opioids (delirium, confusion, myoclonus, nausea, emesis) is one of the major complications in the management of pain, especially in chronic cancer pain states. Methadone, as an alternative to morphine, has been proposed in the control of opioid-induced toxicity. Methadone is a synthetic opioid, with mu and delta receptor activity, associated with the capacity to inhibit N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors. Questions have arisen concerning its equianalgesic ratio since its rediscovery over the past few years and are certainly related to its receptor interactions. Aspects of its pharmacology, indications, and switching modalities are discussed here. Opioid rotation is a new tool in the management of cancer pain, deserving more attention.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Tumor-induced hypercalcemia (TIH) is essentially due to a marked stimulation of osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. An inhibition of bone formation and an enhanced tubular reabsorption of calcium play an important contributory role. These factors explain why serum calcium often rises rapidly in cancer patients and why high doses of bisphosphonates are needed to normalize bone resorption and to overcome the contributory role of the kidney. METHODS The author provides a short review of clinical trials in hypercalcemic cancer patients, with an emphasis on the most recent trials. RESULTS Rehydration and bisphosphonates now constitute the standard treatment of TIH. A single-day 1500-mg infusion of clodronate achieves normocalcemia in approximately 80% of the cases. Clodronate also can be given by subcutaneous infusion that can be particularly useful in the palliative setting. A dose of 90 mg of pamidronate achieves normocalcemia in more than 90% of the patients and has a longer-lasting effect than clodronate. Newer more potent bisphosphonates, such as ibandronate and zoledronate, may improve these results, and they certainly will simplify the therapeutic schemes. Ibandronate at the dose of 6 mg normalizes serum calcium in more than 75% of the patients with moderate or severe hypercalcemia. Of note, the same doses of pamidronate and ibandronate, repeated monthly for 1-2 years, have been shown to substantially reduce the skeletal morbidity rate in normocalcemic patients with tumor bone disease. Even lower doses of zoledronate, the most potent bisphosphonate tested so far, are able to correct TIH when administered as a 30-minute infusion. CONCLUSIONS Bisphosphonates have become the standard treatment for cancer hypercalcemia. Success is achieved in more than 90% of the cases. Other classes of compounds are being tested for their antiosteoclastic activity, and animal studies suggest that osteoprotegerin could be as efficient and act faster than bisphosphonates.
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Lacroix M, Marie PJ, Body JJ. Protein production by osteoblasts: modulation by breast cancer cell-derived factors. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2000; 61:59-67. [PMID: 10930090 DOI: 10.1023/a:1006408916224] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
Abstract
Breast cancer cells (BCC) frequently metastasize to bone where they may cause tumor-induced osteolysis (TIO). While the important eroding role of the osteoclasts in TIO is well admitted, the possibility that BCC and/or osteoblasts activated by tumoral factors could also directly degrade bone matrix in this pathology has been much less investigated. We show here that the net collagen amount produced in vitro by normal human osteoblasts and osteoblast-like cells was significantly reduced by culture medium conditioned by several BCC lines, including three newly isolated ones. There was no evidence for a decrease in collagen synthesis, as assessed by the production of the carboxyterminal propeptide of type I collagen. In contrast, the effect of BCC-derived medium on collagen amount was attenuated by inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) as well as by tranexamic acid, an inhibitor of the plasminogen conversion to plasmin, while it was abolished in presence of the two kinds of proteinase inhibitors. This osteoblastic protein degradation activity appeared to be attributable to factors secreted by the osteoblasts as well as by BCC. These factors had molecular weights lower as well as higher than 10 kD. Our data suggest that besides the eroding action of osteoclasts, BCC- and osteoblast-derived MMPs and serine proteinases might play a direct role in bone collagen degradation in TIO.
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Berghmans T, Paesmans M, Body JJ. A prospective study on hyponatraemia in medical cancer patients: epidemiology, aetiology and differential diagnosis. Support Care Cancer 2000; 8:192-7. [PMID: 10789959 DOI: 10.1007/s005200050284] [Citation(s) in RCA: 105] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/01/2022]
Abstract
The frequency of hyponatraemia varies from less than 1% to more than 40% in series reported from general hospitals. We performed a prospective study to evaluate its incidence and to determine the types of hyponatraemia in a dedicated cancer hospital. All patients admitted to the Department of Medicine were prospectively studied over 11 months. Hyponatraemia was defined as a serum Na level < or =130 mEq/l. Urine and blood samples were collected at baseline, and all consecutive hyponatraemic episodes were studied. One hundred and six patients developed 123 episodes of hyponatraemia. The observed incidence of hyponatraemia was 3.7%. Sodium depletion and syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) each accounted for almost one third of all aetiologies. Serum urea and uric acid, urinary Na and fractional excretions of Na and urea were most useful for the differential diagnosis. The percentage of deaths observed in the hyponatraemic group, 19.5%, was higher than in the whole cancer population (6.3%) although no death was apparently due directly to hyponatraemia. Hyponatraemia is regularly diagnosed in cancer patients, but it was related to SIADH in only about one third of the cases. A higher mortality was observed in hyponatraemic patients than in normonatraemic patients.
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Kaufman JM, Body JJ, Boonen S, Devogelaer JP, Raeman F, Rozenberg S, Reginster JY. [Involutional osteoporosis in women: therapeutic strategy. Recommendations of the Belgian Bone Club]. REVUE MEDICALE DE LIEGE 2000; 55:443-8. [PMID: 10941311] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/17/2023]
Abstract
Osteoporosis is now considered as a major public health issue and a serious threat for the quality of life of elderly women. Several new compounds are currently marketed for the prevention and treatment of involutional osteoporosis in women. Therefore, it is important to offer to the practitioners pragmatic solutions to be used for the rational management of this disorder. This article is the result of a national consensus offering practical guidelines for the management of osteoporotic patients, based on the current published data.
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Dumon JC, Jensen T, Lueddecke B, Spring J, Barlé J, Body JJ. Technical and clinical validation of an immunoradiometric assay for circulating parathyroid hormone-related protein. Clin Chem 2000; 46:416-8. [PMID: 10702531] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/15/2023]
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Body JJ, Sternon J. [Raloxifene (Celvista, Evista)]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 2000; 21:35-41. [PMID: 10748686] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/16/2023]
Abstract
The prevention of osteoporotic fractures in post-menopausal women must be viewed in the framework of the treatment of menopause. SERMs ("Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators") derivative from steroid hormones have estrogenic and antiestrogenic properties according to the substance and the target tissue. Raloxifene is a second generation SERM. It increases bone mass by 1 to 3% according to the measured site and, after 3 years of therapy at the dose of 60 mg per day, it reduces the incidence of vertebral fractures by 30 to 50% if patients have or do not have vertebral fractures before therapy. This drug is approved for the prevention of vertebral fractures in post-menopausal women at increased risk of fractures. A significant reduction in the incidence of hip fractures has not been demonstrated. Raloxifene exerts favorable effects on cardiovascular risk factors but one has to wait for the results of controlled prospective trials before concluding that raloxifene reduces the risk of atherogeniec disease. Preliminary results indicate a substantial reduction of the risk of invasive breast cancer, still to be confirmed. The incidence of vaginal bleeding does not differ from placebo as raloxifene does not stimulate endometrial proliferation. The most serious adverse event, although infrequent, consists in an increase of the relative risk of thromboembolic disease by 3.1 as compared to placebo. Longer term studies are necessary to compare raloxifene with the estrogen replacement therapy and to determine the extra-bone effects.
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Body JJ, Malarme M. [In-Hospital meeting of the AMUB (Association des Medecins anciens etudiants de l'Universite libre de Bruxelles): endocrine digestive tumors]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 1999; 20:A527-8. [PMID: 10722368] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/15/2023]
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Poppe K, Verbruggen LA, Velkeniers B, Finné E, Body JJ, Vanhaelst L. Calcitonin reserve in different stages of atrophic autoimmune thyroiditis. Thyroid 1999; 9:1211-4. [PMID: 10646660 DOI: 10.1089/thy.1999.9.1211] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022]
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the calcitonin (CT) hormone reserve in different severity of atrophic autoimmune thyroiditis (AAT). Forty-eight female patients with AAT were divided into four groups based on basal and peak thyrotropin (TSH) values (after oral thyrotropin-releasing hormone [TRH], free triiodothyronine (FT3) and free thyroxine (FT4) ranging from normal in group 1 to overt hypothyroidism in group 4. All had thyroid antibodies. The control group comprised euthyroid females of comparable age, without thyroid antibodies. Basal CT and CT response to calcium infusion (area under the curve) were investigated as parameters of CT reserve. Basal CT was lower in groups 2 to 4 of patients with AAT (compared to controls), but the difference was not significant. Stimulated CT levels were lower (p < 0.05) in all groups of patients compared to controls, with markedly reduced CT-secretory reserve in group 4. Thyroid antibody concentrations and, basal and postinfusion calcium levels were not significantly different among the various groups. In conclusion CT deficiency (especially stimulated values) occurs in AAT and is more severe in hypothyroid patients than in earlier stages of AAT.
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Rizzoli R, Thiébaud D, Bundred N, Pecherstorfer M, Herrmann Z, Huss HJ, Rückert F, Manegold C, Tubiana-Hulin M, Steinhauer EU, Degardin M, Thürlimann B, Clemens MR, Eghbali H, Body JJ. Serum parathyroid hormone-related protein levels and response to bisphosphonate treatment in hypercalcemia of malignancy. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999; 84:3545-50. [PMID: 10522993 DOI: 10.1210/jcem.84.10.6026] [Citation(s) in RCA: 28] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/12/2023]
Abstract
The pathogenesis of hypercalcemia of malignancy comprises increased net bone resorption and enhanced renal tubular reabsorption of calcium (Ca). To evaluate the prevalence of an increased renal tubular reabsorption of Ca index [tubular reabsorption of calcium index (TRCaI)] in cancer patients with hypercalcemia and of elevated circulating levels of PTH-related protein (PTHrP), which is recognized as a major mediator of this syndrome, we investigated 315 well rehydrated patients, aged 58.1 +/- 0.7 yr (mean +/- SEM), with hypercalcemia [albumin-corrected plasma Ca (pCa), >2.7 mmol/L] secondary to histologically proven malignancy. Changes in pCa and, therefore, various Ca filtered loads were obtained by different degrees of bone resorption inhibition achieved with a single infusion of the bisphosphonate ibandronate, given at various doses on a randomized, double blind basis. PTHrP was determined at baseline in 147 of the patients and 7 days after bisphosphonate therapy in 73. Before ibandronate therapy, pCa was 3.36 +/- 0.02 mmol/L, mean TRCaI was increased at 3.09 +/- 0.03 mmol/L glomerular filtration rate (GFR; normal, 2.40-2.90), and 65% of patients had TRCaI above 2.90 mmol/L GFR. Mean serum PTHrP levels were 4.9 +/- 0.5 pmol/L (normal, <2.5) and values above the normal range were found in 53% of the patients (76% in lung and upper respiratory tract malignancies). By 7 days after the infusion of ibandronate, a decrease in pCa of 0.69 +/- 0.03 mmol/L (20.0 +/- 0.7%; P < 0.001) and in bone resorption [mean change in fasting urinary Ca, 0.09 +/- 0.04 mmol/L GFR (47.6 +/- 8.6%; P < 0.001) and 14.4 +/- 1.7 nmol/mmol (27.6 +/- 10.6%; P < 0.01) in deoxypyridinoline] was observed. TRCaI was slightly lowered by 0.30 +/- 0.09 mmol/L GFR. Mean changes in PTHrP, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, and PTH were +0.7 +/- 0.4 (P = NS), +27.6 +/- 3.0 (P < 0.001), and +2.9 +/- 0.8 (P < 0.005) pmol/L, respectively. After ibandronate treatment, the relative risk of relapsing hypercalcemia was particularly increased (3.43-fold) in lung and upper respiratory tract malignancies. These results obtained in a large cohort of patients indicate a significant prevalence of an increased renal tubular reabsorption of calcium index in hypercalcemia of malignancy and a substantial proportion of patients with detectable PTHrP.
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Body JJ, Lortholary A, Romieu G, Vigneron AM, Ford J. A dose-finding study of zoledronate in hypercalcemic cancer patients. J Bone Miner Res 1999; 14:1557-61. [PMID: 10469284 DOI: 10.1359/jbmr.1999.14.9.1557] [Citation(s) in RCA: 111] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/18/2022]
Abstract
Zoledronate is a new heterocyclic imidazole bisphosphonate that is the most potent bisphosphonate administered in humans because it is 100-850 times more potent than pamidronate, according to in vitro or animal models of bone resorption. We conducted an open-label, dose-finding, single-dose phase I study in tumor-induced hypercalcemia (TIH), which has been similarly used as a model to determine the active doses of other bisphosphonates. The primary objective was to determine, with a dose escalation schedule, two nontoxic dose levels of zoledronate able to induce normocalcemia in at least 80% of patients with TIH after rehydration (corrected Ca for albumin levels >/=2.75 mmol/l). Based on estimates of potency, the starting dose was 0.002 mg/kg, and further tested doses were 0. 005, 0.01, 0.02, and 0.04 mg/kg. To obtain a more precise estimate of the response rate, we treated 10 more patients at the highest of the two effective dose levels. The median infusion time of zoledronate was 30 minutes. Thirty out of the 33 treated patients were evaluable for efficacy. Thirty percent of the patients had breast cancer and 54% had metastatic bone involvement. For all groups combined, mean Ca levels at baseline was 3.0 mmol/l. The two effective dose levels were 0.02 mg/kg and 0.04 mg/kg. Five out of five patients became normocalcemic after 0.02 mg of zoledronate/kg and 14 out of 15 after 0.04 mg of zoledronate/kg. The success rate of the latter dose was thus 93% (95% confidence interval [CI] 68-100%). At this dose, the first day of normocalcemia was day 2 or 3 for all but one patient. The duration of normocalcemia for the two effective doses could be assessed in nine patients; seven patients remained normocalcemic throughout the trial (32-39 days). The fall in serum Ca was accompanied by a marked fall in fasting urinary Ca excretion. Zoledronate was well tolerated: 7 out of 33 patients developed transient hypophosphatemia, and 3 developed transient hypocalcemia. The only clinically detectable side effect was an increase in body temperature occurring in 10 (30%) patients. In summary, very low doses of zoledronate (0.02 mg/kg and 0.04 mg/kg, i. e., 1.2 mg and 2.4 mg for a 60-kg individual, respectively) administered by a short-time infusion effectively treated patients with TIH. The fall in serum Ca was rapid, and normocalcemia was often maintained for several weeks. Zoledronate was well tolerated. Future trials will determine whether prolonged treatment with this potent compound can have greater effects on the skeletal morbidity rate in patients with tumor bone disease than can be achieved with currently available bisphosphonates.
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Abstract
The pathogenesis of cancer anorexia/cachexia is still unclear, partly explaining why its treatment remains disappointing. Anorexia plays a central role but cancer cachexia is more complex than chronic starvation. One of the key differences is the preferential mobilization of fat and the sparing of skeletal muscle in simple starvation compared to an equal mobilization of fat and skeletal muscle in cancer patients. An increase in basal energy expenditure also appears to play a contributory role in many patients. Cytokines, essentially but not exclusively tumor necrosis factor-alpha, play an essential pathogenic role and the syndrome can be compared to a low grade chronic inflammatory state. Parenteral nutrition could facilitate the administration of complete doses of chemotherapy or radiotherapy but no significant survival benefit or decrease in treatment-induced toxicity have been demonstrated in prospective randomized trials. The gut should have the preference for nutritional support. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is used more and more often in patients with a functionally intact gastrointestinal tract, especially in patients with head and neck cancer. Progestational drugs can to some extent stimulate appetite, food intake, energy level, increase weight and decrease the severity of nausea and vomiting. However, pharmacological treatment of cancer cachexia remains disappointing and more trials with anticytokine drugs, anabolic agents or polyunsaturated fatty acids should be conducted.
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Abstract
Dyspnea, which has been defined as an "uncomfortable awareness of breathing," is a frequent and devastating symptom in advanced cancer patients. It has been reported to occur in 21-79% of patients evaluated a few days or weeks before death. In advanced cancer, the aim of effective management is to minimize the patient's perception of breathlessness, which depends in turn on a reliable assessment. Unfortunately, most of our knowledge and experience of dyspnea has been acquired through working with patients with chronic pulmonary disease, and there is a dearth of literature relating specifically to the assessment of dyspnea in advanced cancer. Dyspnea is a complex sensation including several dimensions, such as antecedents (physiological and psychological events or stimuli preceding the development of dyspnea), mediators (characteristics of individuals or their environment affecting the response), reactions to dyspnea, and consequences or outcomes that result once the individual has reacted to a stimulus. The literature gives us many tools to measure these aspects. For example, antecedents may be assessed by the British Medical Research Council Questionnaire, the American Thoracic Questionnaire (ATS-DLD-78) and the Dyspnea Interview Schedule. Mediators of dyspnea may be measured by the ATS-DLD-78, the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ), the Dyspnea Interview Schedule, the Pulmonary Functional Status Scale (PFSS) and the Therapy Impact Questionnaire (TIQ). Reactions to dyspnea may be assessed by the Dyspnea Visual Analogue Scale (DVAS), the TIQ and the Borg Scale, and the consequences of it by the TIQ, the Baseline Dyspnea Index (BDI), the Transition Dyspnea Index (TDI), and CRQ, and by the Oxygen Cost Diagram (OCD), the Dyspnea Interview Schedule and the Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale (MRC). No single assessment tool considers all the different components of dyspnea, and the final choice will depend on the purpose of the assessment, taking into account that the provision of quality of life is of paramount importance to patients who have limited time left to them and that the assessment should not therefore detract from the quality of life by being overlong, complicated or invasive.
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Sotiriou C, Lacroix M, Lagneaux L, Berchem G, Body JJ. The aspirin metabolite salicylate inhibits breast cancer cells growth and their synthesis of the osteolytic cytokines interleukins-6 and -11. Anticancer Res 1999; 19:2997-3006. [PMID: 10652584] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/15/2023]
Abstract
Some epidemiological studies have suggested that aspirin could be a chemopreventive agent against breast cancer. We tested the effects of the aspirin metabolite salicylate (SA) on four (Hs578T, MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, and T-47D) breast cancer cell (BCC) lines in vitro. Two features were studied: the proliferation of BCC and their production of the osteolytic cytokines interleukins-6 (IL-6) and -11 (IL-11) since BCC frequently metastasize to bone and induce tumor-induced osteolysis. SA, from 0.5 to 5 mM, caused BCC growth inhibition by up to 70% (IC50 range 2.54 to 4.28 mM). At high concentrations, the drug induced apoptosis only (MDA-MB-231), or both apoptosis and primary necrosis (MCF-7). SA, as well as indomethacin (INDO), reduced the synthesis of IL-6 and -11, at both the protein and mRNA levels, in the two cell lines producing these cytokines (MDA-MB-231 and Hs578T). This latter effect seemed to be mediated by PGE2 since SA and INDO reduced PGE2 levels in MDA-MB-231 and Hs578T cells, PGE2 was not detected in MCF-7 and T-47D cells and exogenous PGE2 increased IL-6 and -11 expression by MDA-MB-231 cells. Collectively, our results suggest that SA could reduce the growth of breast tumors and inhibit to some extent the ability of BCC to induce osteoclast recruitment and osteolysis. These data indicate the need for further epidemiological and experimental studies.
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Abstract
Cancer anorexia/cachexia is a major clinical problem, especially in advanced cancer patients. Its pathogenesis is quite complex. Anorexia plays a central role, but cancer cachexia is more complex than pure chronic starvation. One of the key differences is the preferential mobilization of fat and the sparing of skeletal muscle in simple starvation compared with an equal mobilization of fat and skeletal muscle in cancer patients. An increase in basal energy expenditures seems to play a contributory role in many patients. Cytokines, essentially but not exclusively tumor necrosis factor alpha, play an essential role, and the syndrome can be compared with a low-grade chronic inflammatory state. As it is in most fields in medicine, prevention is more efficacious than treatment, and, to avoid the final and dramatic stages of cancer cachexia, adequate nutritional advice and support must be provided sufficiently early. Parenteral nutrition could facilitate the administration of complete doses of chemotherapy or radiotherapy, but no significant survival benefit or decrease in treatment-induced toxicity have ever been demonstrated in prospective randomized trials. The gut should always be used if at all possible. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is used increasingly in patients who cannot eat but who have functionally intact gastrointestinal tracts, especially in patients with head and neck cancer. Eight randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies have demonstrated that progestational drugs can somewhat stimulate appetite, food intake, and energy level; increase weight in many patients; and often decrease nausea and vomiting severity; however, pharmacologic treatment of cancer cachexia remains disappointing, and more trials with anticytokine drugs should be conducted.
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Body JJ, Bartl R, Burckhardt P, Delmas PD, Diel IJ, Fleisch H, Kanis JA, Kyle RA, Mundy GR, Paterson AH, Rubens RD. Current use of bisphosphonates in oncology. International Bone and Cancer Study Group. J Clin Oncol 1998; 16:3890-9. [PMID: 9850035 DOI: 10.1200/jco.1998.16.12.3890] [Citation(s) in RCA: 272] [Impact Index Per Article: 10.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
PURPOSE The purpose of this article is to review the recent data on bisphosphonate use in oncology and to provide some guidelines on the indications for their use in cancer patients. DESIGN The group consensus reached by experts on the rationale for the use of bisphosphonates in cancer patients and their current indications for the treatment of tumor-induced hypercalcemia and metastatic bone pain in advanced disease and for the prevention of the complications of multiple myeloma and of metastatic bone disease are reviewed. RESULTS Bisphosphonates are potent inhibitors of tumor-induced osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. They now constitute the standard treatment for cancer hypercalcemia, for which we recommend a dose of 1,500 mg of clodronate or 90 mg of pamidronate; the latter compound is more potent and has a longer lasting effect. Intravenous bisphosphonates exert clinically relevant analgesic effects in patients with metastatic bone pain. Regular pamidronate infusions can also achieve a partial objective response by conventional International Union Against Cancer criteria and enhance the objective response rate to chemotherapy. In breast cancer, the prolonged administration of oral clodronate 1,600 mg daily reduces the frequency of morbid skeletal events by more than one fourth, whereas monthly pamidronate infusions of 90 mg for only 1 year in addition to chemotherapy reduce by more than one third the frequency of all skeletal-related events. The use of bisphosphonates to prevent bone metastases remains experimental. Last, bisphosphonates in addition to chemotherapy are superior to chemotherapy alone in patients with stages II and III multiple myeloma and can reduce the skeletal morbidity rate by approximately one half. CONCLUSION Bisphosphonate use is a major therapeutic advance in the management of the skeletal morbidity caused by metastatic breast cancer or multiple myeloma, although many questions remain unanswered, notably regarding the optimal selection of patients and the duration of treatment.
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Body JJ, Mancini I. [Nutritional and digestive disorders in palliative care]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 1998; 19:A323-6. [PMID: 9805966] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023]
Abstract
The anorexia-cachexia syndrome is a particularly frequent complication of advanced cancer. Parenteral nutrition must remain the exception in palliative medicine but enteral nutrition through feeding tubes or by a gastrostomy is an efficient method to provide an adequate long term nutritional support at home which can improve the quality of life of the palliative care patient. One must never forget all simple means to improve nutritional status. Since the cost benefit ratio of the medications stimulating the appetite, such as the corticosteroids and the progestatives, must still be demonstrated in palliative medicine. Hiccups therapy is essentially based on several non pharmacological means and on the administration of metoclopramide, antacids, haloperidol or chlorpromazine. Chronic nausea is an extremely frequent problem in palliative care, treated most often by metoclopramide, haloperidol and corticosteroids. Constipation is another extremely frequent problem which can lead to serious complication if left untreated. Besides general means, therapeutic means essentially comprise drugs such as lactulose and macrogol, bisacodyl, docusan and prokinetic agents like cipraside.
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Body JJ. [Supportive care: some definitions and principles]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 1998; 19:A309-11. [PMID: 9805962] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023]
Abstract
Supportive care is defined as the totality of medical, nursing, psychosocial and rehabilitative support from the onset of the disease until possible fatal outcome, including all active therapeutic phases. This concept is thus quite large and heterogeneous. The term palliative care is reserved for the approach to the terminal patient. Hospital "Palliative Medicine" should be considered as a subspecialty of Internal Medicine and Medical Oncology. In palliative medicine, symptom control, and no longer prolongation of survival, takes a preponderant place to finally become the only goal to reach. In our mind, a Palliative Care Unit is not necessarily the final stay of a patient where spiritual support will be preponderant. One of our essential goals is always that the patient can come back in his family in collaboration with the family doctor, even for a short time. The ideal situation consists in short stays in the Unit to treat an acute complication before the patient is sent back home or to his Residency. Along this line, a very close collaboration with the family doctor is absolutely essential.
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Mancini I, Body JJ. [Hypodermoclysis, a neglected approach]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 1998; 19:A327-31. [PMID: 9805967] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023]
Abstract
Patients with advanced cancer frequently present with chronic nausea, emesis, bowel obstruction, confusional syndromes or dysphagia. All these conditions make it difficult for the patient to take oral medications or to maintain an adequate level of hydration by mouth. Hypodermoclysis is a safe and simple method that allows for cost-effective sucutaneous delivery of fluids and drugs. Hypodermoclysis has some clearcut advantages over the i.v. route. It can be started without need for a physician or a nurse, does not immobilize a limb, can be stopped and restarted at any moment without concern for clotting, and its use sparses nursing time. It also allows for easier and safer home discharge. Potentiel side effects of hypodermoclysis include pain at infusion site, sloughing tissues as a result of insufficient fluid absorption, infection, and puncture of vessels with bleeding. This paper gives some guidelines for the use of hypodermoclysis for fluid, electrolytes and drugs frequently used in a palliative care setting. The controversy surrounding the treatment of dehydration in the terminally ili is also briefly examined.
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Mancini I, Body JJ. [Treatment of cancer pain: the role of co-analgesics]. REVUE MEDICALE DE BRUXELLES 1998; 19:A319-22. [PMID: 9805965] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023]
Abstract
Opioid analgesics are widely acknowledged as the most important drugs for the treatment of chronic cancer pain. Although these drugs can in most cases control severe pain, even when they are used appropriately, they may produce new symptoms or exacerbate preexisting symptoms, most notably nausea and somnolence. The combination of severe pain, anorexia, chronic nausea, asthenia, and somnolence is a frequent finding in patient with advanced cancer. An adjuvant drug should meet at least one of the following criteria: 1) to increase the analgesic effect of opioids; 2) to decrease their toxicity; 3) to improve others symptoms associated with terminal cancer. Many drugs, such as nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents, tricyclic antidepressants, corticosteroids, benzodiazepines, amphetamines, antiemetics, oral local anesthetics and bisphosphonates have been suggested to have adjuvant analgesic effects. Unfortunately, most of the evidence for the effects of these drugs is anedoctal. Controlled clinical trials are badly needed to precise the indications and the risk/benefit ratios of these agents, some of which have significant toxicity and could potentially aggravate narcotics toxicity.
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