The aim of the present study was to check whether platinum (Pt) concentrations achieved in tumors with a daily low-dose schedule were close to those promoting radiosensitization. Fifteen previously untreated patients with histologically proven advanced uterine cervix tumors were studied. They received a daily irradiation 30 min after a short infusion of 5 mg cisplatin for 5 consecutive days every week. A biopsy was taken from the accessible tumor mass, 4 to 6 hr after the daily injection. Blood samples were obtained once a week, just before the daily injection (H0) and 30 min after (H30). Quantificative analysis of Pt concentrations was performed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Plasma and tumoral Pt concentrations exhibited a marked intersubject variability. The median tumoral Pt concentration was 1,710 mg/g. Median total and ultrafiltrable Pt concentrations in plasma taken at H0 and H30 were 231 and 360 ng/ml, and 7 and 90 ng/ml respectively. Tumoral and total plasma Pt concentrations significantly increased during the course of treatment. Present data show that tumoral Pt concentrations achieved with this CDDP schedule are in the range of tumoral Pt concentrations previously shown to promote radiosensitization (2,000 ng/g). These results suggest that this CDDP radiosensitization regimen might be started with higher CDDP doses in order to reach earlier radiosensitizing Pt tumoral concentrations.
Abstract. -We present a new method for infrared speckle imaging mainly based on the bispectral analysis algorithm applied to extended objects. The efficiency of the reconstruction procedure is increased by a relaxation process making use of redundancies in the pupil plane. The method is applied to near-and mid-infrared data sets of the Red Rectangle (CRL 915) in K, L' and M-bands leading to diffraction limited maps of the post-AGB (Asymptotic Giant Branch) bipolar nebula. Studying the morphology of the Red Rectangle at sub-second of arc scale allows to decompose the near and mid-infrared broadband spectrum in two parts: the radiated light from the central part of the nebula and the radiated light from the lobes to the north and south. This decomposition indicates that, in addition to scattering of the light from a central source, thermal extended emission from warm dust may also be important at arsecond and subarcsecond scales in this bipolar nebula.
Concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CHRT) is the standard of care for unresectable locally advanced stage III non-small cell lung cancer. However, the optimal combination remains unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of 2 induction chemotherapy cycles (days 1 and 22) with docetaxel 75 mg/m2 and cisplatin 75 mg/m2 followed by concurrent chemotherapy (weekly docetaxel-cisplatin, 20 mg/m2) and 3-D conformal radiotherapy for 6 weeks (66 Gy/5 fractions per week/2 Gy per fraction). The primary endpoint was the response rate. Secondary objectives were toxicity, time to progression, and overall survival. Forty-four patients were included and 40 were eligible. The mean age was 60.5 years (range 40.7–72.1), and 75% had stage IIIB disease. Six patients underwent complete R0 resection including 2 pathologic complete responses after a planned intermediate evaluation. Thirty-three patients completed CHRT. The objective response rate was 65% (95% CI 50.2–79.8). Grade 3–4 hematologic and digestive toxicities were observed mainly during the induction phase. Grade 3 esophagitis (5%) was experienced during CHRT. With a median follow-up of 38.7 months, the median progression-free survival was 28.3 months (95% CI 11.0–35.0) and the median survival rate was 31.4 months. Cisplatin-docetaxel induction followed by concurrent 3-D conformal radiotherapy and weekly chemotherapy is a feasible protocol associated with a promising response rate and acceptable toxicity.
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