A mini-symposium was held in Montreal, Canada, at the International Surgical Week for the Breast Surgical International in 2007 addressing the question whether breast cancer is the same disease in Asian and Western countries. Numerous investigators from Asian and Western countries presented the epidemiologic and clinical outcome data of women with breast cancer. Although there are significant similarities, the striking difference is that the peak age for breast cancer is between 40 and 50 years in the Asian countries, whereas the peak age in the Western countries is between 60 and 70 years. Also, the incidence of breast cancer in Asia is rising and is associated with increased mortality. In the West, although the incidence is increasing, the mortality rate is definitely decreasing. Future prospective data collection from Asian and Western countries may provide further interesting epidemiologic and outcome data regarding the outcome of women with breast cancer from Asian and Western countries.BackgroundWhether breast cancer is the same disease in Asian and Western countries was the topic of a 2007 Breast Surgery International symposium at International Surgical Week.MethodsParticipating investigators from China, Taiwan, India, Japan, South Korea, Sweden, Canada, and the United States were asked beforehand to provide data on the epidemiology and treatment outcome of women in their countries.ResultsComparisons of the epidemiologic and clinical outcome data of women with breast cancer showed significant similarities, but the striking difference is that the peak age is between 40 and 50 years in Asian countries, but is between 60 and 70 years in Western countries. The incidence of breast cancer in Asia is rising and is associated with increased mortality. In the West, although the incidence is also increasing, the mortality rate is definitely decreasing.DiscussionFuture prospective data collection from Asian and Western countries may provide further interesting epidemiologic and outcome data regarding the outcome of women with breast cancer from Asian and Western countries.
SummaryWe conducted a phase I pharmacokinetic dose escalation study of a recombinant humanized anti-p185 HER2 monoclonal antibody (MKC-454) in 18 patients with metastatic breast cancer refractory to chemotherapy. Three or six patients at each dose level received 1, 2, 4 and 8 mg kg -1 of MKC-454 as 90-min intravenous infusions. The first dose was followed in 3 weeks by nine weekly doses. Target trough serum concentration has been set at 10 µg ml -1 based on in vitro observations. The mean value of minimum trough serum concentrations at each dose level were 3.58 ± 0.63, 6.53 ± 5.26, 40.2 ± 7.12 and 87.9 ± 23.5 µg ml -1 respectively. At 2 mg kg -1 , although minimum trough serum concentrations were lower than the target trough concentration with a wide range of variation, trough concentrations increased and exceeded the target concentration, as administrations were repeated weekly. Finally 2 mg kg -1 was considered to be sufficient to achieve the target trough concentration by the weekly dosing regimen. One patient receiving 1 mg kg -1 had grade 3 fever, one at the 1 mg kg -1 level had severe fatigue defined as grade 3, and one at 8 mg kg -1 had severe bone pain of grade 3. No antibodies against MKC-454 were detected in any patients. Objective tumour responses were observed in two patients; one receiving 4 mg kg -1 had a partial response in lung metastases and the other receiving 8 mg kg -1 had a complete response in soft tissue metastases. These results indicate that MKC-454 is well tolerated and effective in patients with refractory metastatic breast cancers overexpressing the HER2 proto-oncogene. Further evaluation of this agent with 2-4 mg kg -1 weekly intravenous infusion is warranted.
The purpose of this study was to determine the potential role of positron emission tomography (PET) using 2-[18F]-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) for the evaluation of bony metastasis compared with 99Tcm-methylene diphosphonate (99Tcm-MDP) bone scintigraphy in patients with breast cancer. Fifty-one female patients with breast cancer who had PET together with a bone scan within 1 month between September 1994 and March 1997 were included in this study. The median age was 49 years (range 29-79 years). The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the bone scan were 77.7%, 80.9% and 80.3%, respectively. On the other hand, for the detection of bone metastases PET had a sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 77.7%, 97.6% and 94.1%, respectively. In the diagnosis of bony metastasis derived from breast cancer, FDG-PET was statistically superior to bone scintigraphy in its specificity. In conclusion, FDG-PET appears to be a powerful tool not only in the diagnosis of the primary lesion and soft tissue metastasis, but also in the diagnosis of bony metastasis among patients with breast cancer.
PET imaging can detect primary esophageal cancer with a depth of invasion of T1b or greater, but Tis and T1a tumors are undetectable. PET seems to be more accurate than CT or EUS for diagnosing lymph node metastasis. The T/N ratio cannot be used as a substitute for the SUV.
Although anemia is one of the signs of colorectal cancer, the relationships between histological findings and hematological findings other than hemoglobin level have not been adequately investigated. We investigated the relationship between hematological findings, serum iron, and histological findings in 358 patients (207 men and 157 women) with colorectal cancer. Their mean (+/-SD) ages were 64.3 +/- 12.4 and 63.8 +/- 13.3 years. A hemoglobin level of less than 10 g/dl was the criterion for anemia, and 20.8% of the men and 25.8% of the women met this criterion. Univariate analysis showed that carcinoma of the cecum, ascending colon, and transverse colon; large-size carcinoma, invasion beyond the proper muscle layer; positive lymph node metastasis: and clinical stage (Dukes' B, C, and D) were factors associated with high incidence of anemia. Histological type did not affect the hematological findings. Multivariate analysis showed that age, tumor site, and tumor size were significant factors related to anemia. Depth of invasion, the presence or absence of lymph node metastasis, and Dukes' classification were not significant factors. In the presence of these factors, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration values were low, and red blood cells were microcytic and hypochromic. The incidence of a low serum iron level was about twice the frequency of a hemoglobin level of less than 10 g/dl. The results of the multivariate analysis showed that none of the factors were significantly related to iron deficiency.
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