BackgroundTelehealth solutions can improve the safety of ambulatory chemotherapy, contributing to the maintenance of patients at their home, hence improving their well-being, all the while reducing health care costs. There is, however, need for a practicable multilevel monitoring solution, encompassing relevant outputs involved in the pathophysiology of chemotherapy-induced toxicity. Domomedicine embraces the delivery of complex care and medical procedures at the patient’s home based on modern technologies, and thus it offers an integrated approach for increasing the safety of cancer patients on chemotherapy.ObjectiveThe objective was to evaluate patient compliance and clinical relevance of a novel integrated multiparametric telemonitoring domomedicine platform in cancer patients receiving multidrug chemotherapy at home.MethodsSelf-measured body weight, self-rated symptoms using the 19-item MD Anderson Symptom Inventory (MDASI), and circadian rest-activity rhythm recording with a wrist accelerometer (actigraph) were transmitted daily by patients to a server via the Internet, using a dedicated platform installed at home. Daily body weight changes, individual MDASI scores, and relative percentage of activity in-bed versus out-of-bed (I
The present meta-analysis confirmed that adjuvant chemotherapy of CRC should not last for more than 6 months. Prolonged duration would result in lower benefit to risk ratio. However, the results do not make it possible to favour either 3 or 6 month durations. They should help design a future RCT comparing different durations of continuous treatment.
Anti-angiogenic targeted therapies are now major tools in the management of solid tumors. Briefly, one can distinguish between monoclonal antibodies such as bevacizumab directed against vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and small molecules such as those targeted against receptors with tyrosine-kinase activity. Soon after they were marketed, these drugs showed cardiovascular toxicities, such as hypertension, left ventricular systolic dysfunction, heart failure and conduction abnormalities. The most frequent cardiovascular side effect of targeted therapies is hypertension, but the most life-threatening is QT prolongation with its risk of torsade de pointe and sudden cardiac death. Since the incidence of different types of cardiovascular side effects following targeted therapies varies across studies-and despite the fact that several meta-analyses attempted to summarize available information-those side effects are still not well identified. In addition, their reversibility is not precisely known. This review aims to present and discuss the various cardiovascular toxicities of anti-angiogenic targeted therapies for cancer.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.