14 resultados para Cancer Pain Patients
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Cancer is a disease that has plagued scientists for decades, and how to treat cancer and its complications are inevitable topics in current scientific research. Cancer pain is a major factor that reduces the quality of life of patients. Therefore, the development of analgesic agents with minimal adverse side effects, especially with low addiction, has attracted more and more attention. Among them, opioid analgesics are widely used to alleviate cancer pain and improve the quality of life of patients with advanced cancer, such as in the palliative therapy. Although peptide drugs are efficient, selective and safe, they have several unignorable disadvantages such as poor biological stability, rapid excretion, difficulty in penetrate blood brain barrier. In order to solve these problems, peptidomimetics were developed by introducing unnatural/modified amino acids, decorated peptide backbone, conformational restrictions and secondary structure mimics in peptide sequence. Compared with peptides, peptidomimetics have improved biological stability, increased bioavailability, high affinity and selectivity for receptor binding, and decreased adverse side effects. As the second part of this thesis, I explored the opportunity to design peptide-functionalized responsive biomaterials for the detection of cancer cell and the selective delivery of cytotoxic drugs. The conjugation of peptides with biomaterials enhanced the stability of the loaded drugs, improved targeted delivery, decreased side effects, and increased bioavailability. The precise and controllable drug delivery platform has profound application prospects in cancer treatment. Grafting specific peptides sequence on the surface of biomaterials can satisfy different drug delivery demands according to the characteristics of both peptides and biomaterials. For example, the introduction of tumor-targeting peptides can guide biomaterials into tumor lesions, and blood-brain barrier (BBB) shuttle peptides can lead biomaterials to penetrate the BBB, etc.
Resumo:
Pain is a highly complex phenomenon involving intricate neural systems, whose interactions with other physiological mechanisms are not fully understood. Standard pain assessment methods, relying on verbal communication, often fail to provide reliable and accurate information, which poses a critical challenge in the clinical context. In the era of ubiquitous and inexpensive physiological monitoring, coupled with the advancement of artificial intelligence, these new tools appear as the natural candidates to be tested to address such a challenge. This thesis aims to conduct experimental research to develop digital biomarkers for pain assessment. After providing an overview of the state-of-the-art regarding pain neurophysiology and assessment tools, methods for appropriately conditioning physiological signals and controlling confounding factors are presented. The thesis focuses on three different pain conditions: cancer pain, chronic low back pain, and pain experienced by patients undergoing neurorehabilitation. The approach presented in this thesis has shown promise, but further studies are needed to confirm and strengthen these results. Prior to developing any models, a preliminary signal quality check is essential, along with the inclusion of personal and health information in the models to limit their confounding effects. A multimodal approach is preferred for better performance, although unimodal analysis has revealed interesting aspects of the pain experience. This approach can enrich the routine clinical pain assessment procedure by enabling pain to be monitored when and where it is actually experienced, and without the involvement of explicit communication,. This would improve the characterization of the pain experience, aid in antalgic therapy personalization, and bring timely relief, with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of life of patients suffering from pain.
Resumo:
Background: Axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) in presence of sentinel lymph node (SLN) metastases has been the standard in breast cancer (BC) patients for many years. Today, after the publication of the ACOSOG Z0011 trial, ALND is a procedure restricted to a dwindling group of patients with a clearly metastatic axilla. Material and methods: This was a prospective observational trial involving two Italian Breast Units: Policlinico di Sant’Orsola and San Raffaele hospital. Objective was to evaluate that the omission of ALND in patients with cT1-2 cN0 BC undergoing breast conserving surgery (BCS) and histological finding of metastases in 1 or 2 SLN is not associated with a worse prognostic outcome. Primary endpoint was overall survival (OS). Secondary endpoints were disease free survival (DFS) and locoregional recurrence. All BC patients treated between the 1st of November 2020 and 31st of July 2023 with cT1-2 cN0 BC, preoperative negative axillary ultrasound and 1 or 2 metastatic SLN treated with sentinel node biopsy (SLNB) alone entered the study. Results: 795 cT1-2 cN0 BC patients underwent BCS and SLNB. Ninety patients were included. Median age was 60 (52-68) years. Seventy-five patients (83%) had T1 tumor and 15 (17%) T2. Median tumor size was 16 mm (11-19). The median SLN removed was 2 (1-3). Eighty-one patients had 1 positive SLN (90%), while 9 had 2 SLN metastasis (10%). 39 (43%) micrometastases were identified and 51 macrometastasis (57%). All patients underwent radiotherapy. Seventeen (19%) performed adjuvant chemotherapy. Two received immunotherapy with trastuzumab and pertuzumab. Endocrine therapy was given to 84 (93%). At a median follow-up of 19 months (IQR 13-23) OS and DFS were 100%. No loco-regional recurrence was seen. Conclusion: The preliminary results of our study confirm that omitting ALND in patients meeting Z011 criteria is oncologically safe and should be the standard of care.
Resumo:
La chirurgia conservativa o l’esofagectomia, possono essere indicate per il trattamento della disfagia nell’acalasia scompensata. L’esofagectomia è inoltre finalizzata alla prevenzione dello sviluppo del carcinoma esofageo. Gli obiettivi erano: a) definire prevalenza e fattori di rischio per il carcinoma epidermoidale; b) confrontare i risultati clinici e funzionali di Heller-Dor con pull-down della giunzione esofagogastrica (PD-HD) ed esofagectomia. I dati in analisi, ricavati da un database istituito nel 1973 e finalizzato alla ricerca prospettica, sono stati: a) le caratteristiche cliniche, radiologiche ed endoscopiche di 573 pazienti acalasici; b) il risultato oggettivo e la qualità della vita, definita mediante questionario SF-36, dopo intervento di PD-HD (29 pazienti) e dopo esofagectomia per acalasia scompensata o carcinoma (20 pazienti). Risultati: a) sono stati diagnosticati 17 carcinomi epidermoidali ed un carcinosarcoma (3.14%). Fattori di rischio sono risultati essere: il diametro esofageo (p<0.001), il ristagno esofageo (p<0.01) e la durata dei sintomi dell’acalasia (p<0.01). Secondo l’albero di classificazione, soltanto i pazienti con esito insufficiente del trattamento ai controlli clinico-strumentali ed acalasia sigmoidea presentavano un rischio di sviluppare il carcinoma squamocellulare del 52.9%. b) Non sono state riscontrate differenze statisticamente significative tra i pazienti sottoposti ad intervento conservativo e quelli trattati con esofagectomia per quanto concerne l’esito dell’intervento valutato mediante parametri oggettivi (p=0.515). L’analisi della qualità della vita non ha evidenziato differenze statisticamente significative per quanto concerne i domini GH, RP, PF e BP. Punteggi significativamente più elevati nei domini RE (p=0.012), VT (p<0.001), MH (p=0.001) e SF (p=0.014) sono stati calcolati per PD-HD rispetto alle esofagectomie. In conclusione, PD-HD determina una miglior qualità della vita, ed è pertanto la procedura di scelta per i pazienti con basso rischio di cancro. A coloro che abbiano già raggiunto i parametri di rischio, si offrirà l’esofagectomia o l'opzione conservativa seguita da protocolli di follow-up.
Resumo:
Objective The objective of this study was to develop a clinical nomogram to predict gallium-68 prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography/computed tomography (68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT) positivity in different clinical settings of PSA failure. Materials and methods Seven hundred three (n = 703) prostate cancer (PCa) patients with confirmed PSA failure after radical therapy were enrolled. Patients were stratified according to different clinical settings (first-time biochemical recurrence [BCR]: group 1; BCR after salvage therapy: group 2; biochemical persistence after radical prostatectomy [BCP]: group 3; advanced stage PCa before second-line systemic therapies: group 4). First, we assessed 68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT positivity rate. Second, multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to determine predictors of positive scan. Third, regression-based coefficients were used to develop a nomogram predicting positive 68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT result and 200 bootstrap resamples were used for internal validation. Fourth, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to identify the most informative nomogram’s derived cut-off. Decision curve analysis (DCA) was implemented to quantify nomogram’s clinical benefit. Results 68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT overall positivity rate was 51.2%, while it was 40.3% in group 1, 54% in group 2, 60.5% in group 3, and 86.9% in group 4 (p < 0.001). At multivariable analyses, ISUP grade, PSA, PSA doubling time, and clinical setting were independent predictors of a positive scan (all p ≤ 0.04). A nomogram based on covariates included in the multivariate model demonstrated a bootstrap-corrected accuracy of 82%. The nomogram-derived best cut-off value was 40%. In DCA, the nomogram revealed clinical net benefit of > 10%. Conclusions This novel nomogram proved its good accuracy in predicting a positive scan, with values ≥ 40% providing the most informative cut-off in counselling patients to 68Ga-PSMA-11-PET/CT. This tool might be important as a guide to clinicians in the best use of PSMA-based PET imaging.
Resumo:
Introduction: Despite there are already many studies on robotic surgery as minimally invasive approach for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, the use of this technique for stage III disease is still poorly described. These are the preliminary results of our prospective study on safety and effectiveness of robotic approach in patients with locally advanced NSCLC, in terms of postoperative complications and oncological outcome. Methods: Since 2016, we prospectively investigated, using standardized questionnaire and protocol, 21 consecutive patients with NSCLC stage IIIA-pN2 (diagnosed by EBUS-TBNA) who underwent lobectomy and radical lymph node dissection with robotic approach after induction treatment. Then, we performed a matched case-control study with 54 patients treated with open surgery during the same period of time, with similar age, clinical and pathological tumor stage. Results: The individual matched population was composed of 14 robot-assisted thoracic surgery and 14 patients who underwent open surgery. The median time range of resection was inferior in the open group compared to robotic lobectomy (148 vs 229 minutes; P=0.002). Lymph nodes resection and positivity were not statistically significantly different (p=0.66 and p=0.73 respectively). No difference was observed also for PFS (P=0.99) or OS (P=0.94). Conclusions: Our preliminary results demonstrated that the early outcomes and oncological results of N2-patients after robotic lobectomy were similar to open surgery. Considering the advantages of minimally invasive surgery, robotic assisted lobectomy should be a safe approach also to patients with local advanced disease.
Resumo:
L’ipotesi di fondo su cui si basa l’intero lavoro è che il dolore oncologico debba essere riconosciuto come “malattia nella malattia”: non si può considerare tale dolore mero “sintomo” del cancro ma esperienza totale che coinvolge l’intera persona. Il dolore oncologico è carico di valenze e significati personali, è associato a rappresentazioni sociali e, come ogni malattia, è disease, illness e sickness. Partendo da questo presupposto, la dissertazione si è posta come obiettivo generale quello di studiare il dolore oncologico tra le donne con tumore al seno, le sue componenti sociali, psicologiche, individuali oltre che fisiche; si è voluto inoltre studiare la specificità del vissuto e dei significati associati all’esperienza dolorosa. Il lavoro è articolato in due parti fondamentali, una teorica ed una empirica. La prima presenta un inquadramento dei principali concetti della sociologia della salute riguardanti il dolore. Per quanto riguarda la parte empirica, si è fatto ricorso ad una ricerca mista, fatta di metodi misti e fondata su un approccio metodologico di natura integrativa che si avvale di tecniche quantitative e qualitative. La parte quantitativa si basa su una parte dei dati della ricerca nazionale ESOPO - Epidemiological Study of Pain in Oncology. Dall’intero campione sono state isolate le sole donne con tumore al seno (n=846). Si è proceduto quindi allo studio di tale campione, alle elaborazioni statistiche con il programma SPSS e all’interpretazione dei risultati. Per quanto riguarda la parte qualitativa, invece, è stata condotta un’analisi delle fonti che si è avvalsa di un approccio netnografico: è stata condotta un’osservazione non intrusiva di 12 blog scritti da donne con tumore al seno, con lo scopo di indagare le narrazioni di malattia, i vissuti personali, i significati di dolore e malattia e le loro ripercussioni sulla vita quotidiana.
Resumo:
The transcribed ultraconserved regions (T-UCRs) are a group of long non-coding RNAs involved in human carcinogenesis. The factors regulating the expression of T-UCRs and their mechanism of action in human cancers are unknown. In this work it was shown that high expression of uc.339 associates with lower survival in 204 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Moreover, it was shown that uc.339 found up-regulated in archival NSCLC samples, acts as a decoy RNA for miR-339-3p, -663-3p and -95-5p. So, Cyclin E2, a direct target of three microRNAs is up-regulated, inducing cancer growth and migration. Evidence of this mechanism was provided from cell lines and primary samples confirming that TP53 directly regulates uc.339. These results support a key role for uc.339 in lung cancer.
Resumo:
L'utilità clinica dell’uso routinario delle tecniche di sequenziamento di nuova generazione (NGS) nei pazienti con cancro colorettale metastatico andrebbe approfondita. In questo studio, è stato valutato l'impatto di un pannello NGS da 52 geni utilizzato nella pratica clinica di routine. Abbiamo analizzato i risultati dei test molecolari multigenici in pazienti con carcinoma colorettale metastatico (mCRC) in uno studio osservazionale, retrospettivo e monocentrico su pazienti affetti da carcinoma colorettale metastatico consecutivamente testati presso un centro oncologico italiano tra giugno 2019 e dicembre 2020. Le analisi di sopravvivenza sono state effettuate con il metodo Kaplan-Meier, test log-rank e modello di Cox. Complessivamente sono stati inclusi 179 pazienti con mCRC. Il follow-up mediano è stato di 33 mesi (IQR: 28,45–NR). I quattro geni più frequentemente mutati sono stati: KRAS (48,6%), PIK3CA (22,4%), BRAF (14,5%) e APC (8,4%). È stata trovata un'associazione positiva tra la sopravvivenza globale (OS) e le mutazioni KRAS con un'alta frequenza allelica variante (VAF) [HR: 0,60 (0.36 – 0.99), P=0.047]. La mutazione BRAF era associata a OS inferiore [HR: 2,62 (1,59-4,32), P <0,001]. Il panello NGS ha consentito a otto pazienti di accedere a terapie a bersaglio molecolare non ancora registrate per il cancro colorettale. In conclusione, i pannelli NGS in mCRC sono fattibili nella pratica clinica in laboratori di riferimento per consentire un impatto inferiore sui costi e un aggiornamento regolare. La mutazione di BRAF risulta associata a una prognosi peggiore. Le mutazioni di KRAS con un’elevata variazione di frequenza allelica erano associate a una sopravvivenza globale superiore rispetto ai pazienti KRAS non mutati. Sono necessari studi più approfonditi per analizzare meglio i fattori prognostici.
Resumo:
Obiettivo: Lo scopo principale di questo studio è analizzare lo sviluppo di complicanze cardiovascolari (CV) nei pazienti con neoplasia e malattia moderata-severa da COVID-19 e valutare differenze di genere per il rischio di mortalità intraospedaliera o di complicanze CV. Materiali e Metodi. Popolazione oggetto di studio. Pazienti inclusi nel registro ISACS-COVID 19 (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05188612), dati raccolti a partire da Febbraio 2020 a Luglio 2022. I pazienti arruolati sono stati reclutati da centri ospedalieri di cinque paesi: Italia, Croazia, Macedonia, Serbia e Romania. Le caratteristiche d’inclusione comprendono: età >18 anni, essere ospedalizzati e avere diagnosi certa d’infezione da SARS-CoV2. Gli endpoint analizzati sono stati: mortalità intraospedaliera e lo sviluppo di scompenso cardiaco acuto (SCA) nei pazienti con neoplasia. Risultati. La popolazione finale oggetto dello studio era di 4,014 pazienti ospedalizzati per malattia da COVID-19. Di questi circa l’8% risultava affetto da neoplasia. I pazienti con neoplasia risultavano essere più frequentemente donne (49% vs 40%, p=0.004), con un’età media più alta (68.3±12.95 vs 65.2±15.6, p<0.001) ma con profilo di rischio CV simile ai pazienti liberi da neoplasia. A seguito di analisi logistica di regressione multivariata, le donne non risultavano avere un incremento del rischio di mortalità intraospedaliera (OR 0.83;95%CI 0.66-2.45), mentre la presenza di tumore era significativamente associata ad incremento di mortalità (OR 1.68;95%CI 1.16-2.45). Restringendo le analisi di regressione logistica ai pazienti oncologici, le donne presentavano un incremento del rischio di sviluppo di SC acuto (OR3.07;95%CI 1.14 – 8.30) così come lo era la presenza di tumore al seno (OR 2.26; 95%CI 1.38 – 12.1). Conclusioni. La presenza di neoplasia rappresenta una condizione che incrementa il rischio di mortalità intraospedaliera nei pazienti ricoverati con COVID-19, mentre il genere femminile no. Le donne sembrano avere un rischio aumentato di sviluppo di SC acuto soprattutto se presentano un tumore al seno
Resumo:
Premessa: Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) riduce le complicanze e accorcia il recupero nei pazienti sottoposti a chirurgia per tumore del colon-retto. I pazienti più anziani sono spesso esclusi dai programmi ERAS a causa della difficoltà nell'applicazione dei protocolli stabiliti. Lo scopo dello studio è stato valutare i benefici di ERAS nei pazienti anziani sottoposti a chirurgia colorettale elettiva e valutare i risultati a breve termine. Metodi: studio monocentrico osservazionale prospettico condotto da febbraio 2021 a luglio 2022. Sono stati inclusi tutti i pazienti di età ≥ 70 anni sottoposti a chirurgia colorettale elettiva. I risultati e le complicanze postoperatorie dei pazienti trattati secondo il nostro protocollo ERAS sono stati confrontati con un gruppo di pazienti < 70 anni sottoposti a intervento chirurgico per cancro del colon-retto nello stesso periodo. Risultati: abbiamo incluso un totale di 186 pazienti (104 ≥ 70 anni vs. 82 < 70 anni). Un terzo dei pazienti di entrambi i gruppi non ha sviluppato complicanze perioperatorie (65,4% vs. 67,0%, p = 0,880). Ugualmente non sono state osservate differenze nell’incidenza di complicanze di grado I-II (31,7% vs. 28,0%) né digrado III-IV (1,9% vs. 4,9%) secondo Dindo-Clavien tra i due gruppi (p = 0,389). Il tasso di leak anastomotico e il reintervento non sono risultati statisticamente differenti tra i due gruppi: 3,8% vs. 4,9% (p = 0,733) e 1,0% vs. 3,6% (p = 0,322) rispettivamente pazienti ≥ 70 anni vs. < 70 anni. I temi di degenza media sono stati di 5.1±4.3 vs. 4.6±4.2, (p = 0.427), mentre i tassi di riammissione sono rimasti inalterati. La mortalità a 90 giorni è risultata del 2,8% vs. 0% (p = 0,256). Conclusioni: nella nostra esperienza i pazienti ≥ 70 anni affetti da tumore del colon-retto dovrebbero seguire routinariamente un programma ERAS prevedendo gli stessi benefici degli altri gruppi di età.
Resumo:
The thesis describes three studies concerning the role of the Economic Preference set investigated in the Global Preference Survey (GPS) in the following cases: 1) the needs of women with breast cancer; 2) pain undertreament in oncology; 3) legal status of euthanasia and assisted suicide. The analyses, based on regression techniques, were always conducted on the basis of aggregate data and revealed in all cases a possible role of the Economic Preferences studied, also resisting the concomitant effect of the other covariates that were considered from time to time. Regarding individual studies, the related conclusion are: 1) Economic Preferences appear to play a role in influencing the needs of women with breast cancer, albeit of non-trivial interpretation, statistically "resisting" the concomitant effect of the other independent variables considered. However, these results should be considered preliminary and need further confirmation, possibly with prospective studies conducted at the level of the individual; 2) the results show a good degree of internal consistency with regard to pro-social GPS scores, since they are all found to be non-statistically significant and united, albeit only weakly in trend, by a negative correlation with the % of pain undertreated patients. Sharper, at least statistically, is the role of Patience and Willingness to Take Risk, although of more complex empirical interpretation. 3) the results seem to indicate an obvious role of Economic Preferences, however difficult to interpret empirically. Less evidence, at least on the inferential level, emerged, however, regarding variables that, based on common sense, should play an even more obvious role than Economic Preferences in orienting attitudes toward euthanasia and assisted suicide, namely Healthcare System, Legal Origin, and Kinship Tightness; striking, in particular, is the inability to prove a role for the dominant religious orientation even with a simple bivariate analysis.
Resumo:
Bone metastases are responsible for different clinical complications defined as skeletal-related events (SREs) such as pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, hypercalcaemia, bone marrow infiltration and severe bone pain requiring palliative radiotherapy. The general aim of these three years research period was to improve the management of patients with bone metastases through two different approaches of translational research. Firstly in vitro preclinical tests were conducted on breast cancer cells and on indirect co-colture of cancer cells and osteoclasts to evaluate bone targeted therapy singly and in combination with conventional chemotherapy. The study suggests that zoledronic acid has an antitumor activity in breast cancer cell lines. Its mechanism of action involves the decrease of RAS and RHO, as in osteoclasts. Repeated treatment enhances antitumor activity compared to non-repeated treatment. Furthermore the combination Zoledronic Acid + Cisplatin induced a high antitumoral activity in the two triple-negative lines MDA-MB-231 and BRC-230. The p21, pMAPK and m-TOR pathways were regulated by this combined treatment, particularly at lower Cisplatin doses. A co-colture system to test the activity of bone-targeted molecules on monocytes-breast conditioned by breast cancer cells was also developed. Another important criticism of the treatment of breast cancer patients, is the selection of patients who will benefit of bone targeted therapy in the adjuvant setting. A retrospective case-control study on breast cancer patients to find new predictive markers of bone metastases in the primary tumors was performed. Eight markers were evaluated and TFF1 and CXCR4 were found to discriminate between patients with relapse to bone respect to patients with no evidence of disease. In particular TFF1 was the most accurate marker reaching a sensitivity of 63% and a specificity of 79%. This marker could be a useful tool for clinicians to select patients who could benefit for bone targeted therapy in adjuvant setting.
Resumo:
Background. Abiraterone acetate is a potent inhibitor of cytochrome P450 17 α-hydrolase (CYP17A1) that causes a reduction in the synthesis of testosterone in the adrenal glands, testes and tumor microenvironment. Blocking androgen production, abiraterone has been shown to prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) previously submitted to chemotherapy. The aim of our study was to verify the role of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in predicting clinical outcome in CRPC patients treated with abiraterone after chemotherapy. Methods. We analyzed 48 CRPC consecutive patients treated with abiraterone after at least one chemotherapeutic regimen with docetaxel. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood and genotyped for four polymorphisms in the CYP17A1 gene (rs743572, rs10883783, rs17115100, rs284849). PFS and OS survival curves were used to identify statistical associations between haplotypes and clinical outcome. Results. Forty-eight Caucasian patients with metastatic CRPC treated with abiraterone were genotyped for polymorphisms in the CYP17A1 gene. All samples were evaluable for both sequencing and TaqMan Genotyping assay. The CRPC patients treated with abiraterone had a median PFS and OS of 7.6 months (95% CI: 4.3-10.5) and 17.6 months (95% CI: 10.5-19.0), respectively Statistical analyses highlighted a difference approaching statistical significance (log-rank test p = 0.0534) between rs10883783 and PFS. Other polymorphisms were not associated with a benefit from treatment with abiraterone. Conclusions. In our case series of 48 treated patients, rs10883783 only was identified as a possible predictive marker, results showing a trend toward statistical significance. Further analysis of this polymorphism is needed in larger series of patients to confirm our findings.