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In this issue of ONCOLOGY,Chaudhary and Hull succinctlysummarize historical trends andcurrent thinking regarding the role ofcytoreductive nephrectomy in patientswith metastatic kidney cancer.Before the era of immunotherapy,there was little evidence that the naturalhistory of metastatic renal cellcarcinoma was improved by cytoreductivenephrectomy.[1] Patientswith metastatic cancer generally diefrom complications related to theirsites of tumor spread and not fromthe primary tumor; thus, on face value,it seems illogical to surgicallyremove the primary tumor in thesepatients.

This special supplement to Oncology NewsInternational includes updated results ofstudies with anti-CD20 therapy and othertargeted therapies in the treatment oflymphomas, chronic lymphocytic leukemia,and immune thrombocytopenic purpura. Theresults were presented at the American Societyof Hematology 44th Annual Meeting inPhiladelphia, December 6 to 10, 2002.City Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

CHICAGO-According to early experience at one imaging center in Massachusetts, whole-body screening CT is attracting individuals who may benefit from early detection of disease, such as current or former smokers and persons with other risk factors for cancer and heart disease. These researchers found that whole-body screening CT is not, as some have feared, leading to additional unnecessary invasive and expensive testing. However, a California study found that nearly half of persons with an abnormality found on screening required follow-up testing.

Two cancer-related issues-evidence-based cancer screening andpain control in advanced cancer-are among 20 priority areasthat an Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee has urged publicand private organizations to focus on as a way of transforming healthcare in the United States. Goals regarding screening, especially forcolorectal and cervical cancer, the report said, are "to increase thenumber of people who receive screenings and to provide timely followup."Regarding pain control in patients with advanced cancer, thecommittee urged efforts to "emphasize cooperation in protocols acrosscare settings, advance planning for changes in settings, as well asheightened pain, and public education regarding the merits of opioidmedications in this area."

Confronted with essentially stagnant budgets in coming years, theNational Cancer Institute (NCI) is initiating an unprecedentedeffort to solicit the views of the cancer community about settingits future research priorities. NCI wants greater input from its own staff andadvisory groups, cancer researchers and clinicians, advocates, and othergroups that fund cancer research as it decides where to focus its futureefforts, according to a briefing document provided to the National CancerAdvisory Board (NCAB) subcommittee on budget and planning.

This special “annual highlights” supplement to Oncology News International (ONI)is a compilation of selected news on important advances in the management ofgastrointestinal cancers over the past year, as reported in ONI. Guest Editor, Dr.James L. Abbruzzese, comments on the reports included herein and discussesdevelopments in the clinical management of GI cancers, with a look at the impactof targeted agents with cytotoxic chemotherapy, first-line and adjuvant therapies foradvanced disease, and the role of statins and COX-2 inhibitors in prevention.

This special “annual highlights” supplement to Oncology News International (ONI)is a compilation of selected news on important advances in the management ofgastrointestinal cancers over the past year, as reported in ONI. Guest Editor, Dr.James L. Abbruzzese, comments on the reports included herein and discussesdevelopments in the clinical management of GI cancers, with a look at the impactof targeted agents with cytotoxic chemotherapy, first-line and adjuvant therapies foradvanced disease, and the role of statins and COX-2 inhibitors in prevention.

HERSHEY, Pennsylvania-Elevated levels of common serum biomarkers, including HER2/neu, predict response to hormone therapy among women with advanced breast cancer, according to a study reported by Kim Leitzel, MS, senior research associate in the Experimental Oncology Research Lab, directed by Allan Lipton, MD, at Penn State/Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania.

ANN ARBOR, Michigan-Giving oral capecitabine (Xeloda) plus IV vinorelbine (Navelbine) in flat doses unadjusted for body surface area (BSA) is a feasible, convenient strategy that has good activity in previously treated metastatic breast cancer, according to results of a phase I/II study. The findings lay the groundwork for investigating a potential flat-dosed, all-oral regimen, according to Anne F. Schott, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine with the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center at Ann Arbor.

ESSEN, Germany-The combination of capecitabine (Xeloda) plus vinorelbine (Navelbine) is feasible and has a favorable toxicity profile in anthracycline-pretreated or taxane-pretreated advanced breast cancer, according to results of a recent phase I/II study. "The response rate over 50% is very promising," noted Udo Vanhoefer, MD, professor of medicine at University of Essen Medical School in Germany. "We had no alopecia, the incidence of hand-foot syndrome is very low, and the dose density is very high at 90% and very acceptable for this combination."

BERN, Switzerland-The antiestrogen fulvestrant (Faslodex) is an effective and well-tolerated treatment option for women with heavily pretreated, hormone-sensitive advanced breast cancer, according to an interim analysis from an ongoing study by the Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Research (SAKK), based in Bern, Switzerland. All of the patients in the study had failed both tamoxifen and an aromatase inhibitor, but 11 of 32 patients (34%) had prolonged clinical benefit on fulvestrant 250 mg every 28 days.

EVANSTON, Indiana-Analysis of traditional factors that correlate with choice of mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery failed to explain the significantly higher mastectomy rates in the United States compared to the United Kingdom seen in the international Arimidex (anastrozole), Tamoxifen, Alone or in Combination (ATAC) trial. ATAC investigator Gershon Y. Locker, MD, noted the striking difference "in the mastectomy rates between the two largest accruing nations in ATAC-the United Kingdom with a 42% mastectomy rate and the United States with a 51% mastectomy rate. This is a 21% increased risk of having a mastectomy if enrolled in the United States compared to the United Kingdom."

PHILADELPHIA-T-cell depletion had no clear advantage over immunosuppressive drug therapy in patients receiving a matched, unrelated donor bone marrow transplant, John E. Wagner, MD, reported at the 44th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH abstract 274).

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina-Dose-intense, dose-dense neoadjuvant docetaxel (Taxotere) /vinorelbine (Navelbine) produced a pathologic complete response rate of 36% in women with locally advanced breast cancer, making the combination among the most active ever tested in this setting, according to investigator Steven A. Limentani, MD. Preliminary study results also suggest the regimen is safe and well tolerated.

CHICAGO-Among patients with intractable and severe pain because of bony metastases, radiofrequency ablation either relieved pain completely or produced a significant reduction in patients’ assessment of pain, according to a study presented at the 88th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA abstract 228VI-p). In this multicenter study of 62 patients with osteolytic metastases, 44% reported they were completely free of pain at some point during the 6 months following radiofrequency ablation, 81% had a 3-point drop in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), and 95% had at least a 2-point drop in BPI.

REIMS, France-Results of a French study suggest that oncologists should not underestimate the potential threat posed by local recurrence of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). Reporting on the DCIS experience of 11 French cancer centers, Bruno Cutuli, MD, a radiation oncologist at the Center for Radiotherapy and Oncology at Polyclinique Courlancy in Reims, France, emphasized the importance of optimal initial treatment, close follow-up and definitive treatment after an invasive local recurrence.

HOUSTON-A gene that has been labeled metastasis-associated gene appears to be related to poor disease-free survival. Investigators at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston have produced a polyclonal antibody to metastasis-associated tumor antigen (MTA1)-specific isotopes that may prove useful as a prognostic marker for recurrence.

HOUSTON-The nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor anastrozole (Arimidex) continues to outperform tamoxifen in every efficacy measurement in the Arimidex, Tamoxifen, Alone or in Combination (ATAC) trial, according to a recent 47-month update. Speaking for the ATAC Trialists’ Group, Aman U. Buzdar, MD, professor of medicine and deputy chairman of the Department of Breast Medical Oncology at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, reported that the absolute differences between the two drugs are increasing with time.

INDIANAPOLIS-Adding the antiangiogenesis agent bevacizumab (Avastin) to capecitabine (Xeloda) increases the objective response rate-but not progression-free survival-in women with advanced breast cancer, according to a phase III trial. This was the first randomized trial to report results with an antiangiogenic agent in patients with metastatic disease, according to lead investigator Kathy D. Miller, MD, assistant professor of medicine in the division of hematology/oncology at Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.

Infections are major causes of morbidityand mortality in patientswith cancer. In certain instances,the malignancy itself can predisposepatients to severe or recurrent infections.For example, acute leukemiamay cause neutropenia and ensuingbacterial or fungal infection. Hypogammaglobulinemiaof chroniclymphocytic leukemia may be complicatedby infections due to encapsulatedbacteria. Patients withHodgkin’s lymphoma may sufferfrom recurrent varicella-zoster infections.Solid tumors may obstruct thelumens of respiratory, digestive, andurinary tracts, leading to bacterial infections.Nevertheless, the principalrisk of infectious complications is relatedto the intensity and duration ofimmunosuppressive chemotherapy.Patients with cancer constitute ahighly varied population, both interms of the underlying malignancyand in terms of their immunosuppression.In addition, a single patientmay have multiple predisposing factors,thus increasing the spectrum oflikely pathogens. When evaluating apatient with cancer for a possible infection,it is essential to develop aconceptual framework of quantitativeand qualitative immune defectsthe patient is likely to have, and thento stratify the risk for specific pathogensin the context of the history,physical exam, and laboratorydata.[1]

Each year, 2.4 million patients in the United States develop healthcare–associated infections (HAIs), requiring treatment at an annualcost of approximately $4.5 billion. HAI is the primary cause of deathin approximately 30,000 patients and contributes to the death of 70,000annually. Oncology patients are more susceptible than other patientsto HAIs due to compromised immune systems, surgery (drains),invasive technology (catheters), and environmental factors. This paperwill review each of these risk factors and discuss preventive steps suchas a predictive index, antibiotic therapy, and infection control practices.

Drs. Guinan, McGuckin, andNowell have nicely reviewedthe risk factors associatedwith increased susceptibility to hospital-acquired infection in oncologypatients and also discussed preventivesteps to attenuate those risks.We agree that patients with malignanciespresent a challenge to thehealth-care provider, as infection willdevelop at some point in almost allcancer patients[1] and may be associatedwith significant mortality.[2]

HOUSTON-Inflammation is a common link between the toxicity of chemotherapy and cancer progression, and the possibility that anti-inflammatory treatments might help both is attracting more research attention. "Cancer is a nonhealing wound with persistent inflammation," Edward H. Lin, MD, said, quoting Harold Dvorak, MD, of Beth Israel Hospital in Boston. Dr. Lin is assistant professor of gastrointestinal medical oncology at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

CHICAGO-Black men with localized prostate cancer do just as well as white men when treated with brachy-therapy alone, William Barrett, MD, said at the 88th Annual Scientific Assembly of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA abstract 252RO-p).

MELVILLE, New York-ONI is pleased to announce the addition of two new members to its recently created Editorial Advisory Board for Oncology Nursing: Genevieve V. Foley, RN, MSN, OCN, CNAA, and Mary Pazdur, RN, MSN, ANP, AOCN. The two will work with Sharon Krumm, PhD, RN, Editor of Oncology Nursing, and current nursing board members Catherine Coleman, RN, OCN, and Mary McCabe, BSN, MA (see ONI January 2003, page 27).

BETHESDA, Maryland-Cell signaling pathways offer many potential targets for antitumor therapies, but hitting those targets is proving more difficult than researchers had anticipated, according to John J. Wright, MD, PhD. He is senior clinical investigator, Investigational Drug Branch, Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland.

PHILADELPHIA-Preoperative chemoradiotherapy with irinotecan (CPT-11, Camptosar), fluorouracil (5-FU), and radiation showed a significant ability to downsize rectal adenocarcinomas and is being studied further in clinical trials, Edith P. Mitchell, MD, reported. Due to problems associated with the central venous access required for continuous infusion 5-FU, capecitabine (Xeloda) is being substituted for 5-FU in ongoing studies. Dr. Mitchell is clinical professor of medicine at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.

ROCHESTER, Minnesota-Summarizing cooperative group approaches to adjuvant treatment of colorectal cancer, Charles Erlichman, MD, noted: "Treatment for stage II colon cancer remains controversial. Treatment for stage III colon cancer should be fluorouracil (5-FU)/leucovorin. Treatment for stage III rectal cancer should be radiation plus fluorouracil/leucovorin. The results of three-drug regimens are pending, as are data on the role of COX-2 inhibitors and of targeted agents such as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or tyrosine kinase inhibitors." Dr. Erlichman is professor of oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.