| Literature DB >> 19036143 |
M van Heijl1, J J B van Lanschot, L B Koppert, M I van Berge Henegouwen, K Muller, E W Steyerberg, H van Dekken, B P L Wijnhoven, H W Tilanus, D J Richel, O R C Busch, J F Bartelsman, C C E Koning, G J Offerhaus, A van der Gaast.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A surgical resection is currently the preferred treatment for esophageal cancer if the tumor is considered to be resectable without evidence of distant metastases (cT1-3 N0-1 M0). A high percentage of irradical resections is reported in studies using neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery versus surgery alone and in trials in which patients are treated with surgery alone. Improvement of locoregional control by using neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy might therefore improve the prognosis in these patients. We previously reported that after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy with weekly administrations of Carboplatin and Paclitaxel combined with concurrent radiotherapy nearly always a complete R0-resection could be performed. The concept that this neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy regimen improves overall survival has, however, to be proven in a randomized phase III trial. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19036143 PMCID: PMC2605735 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2482-8-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Hypersensitivity reactions after chemotherapy: classification and management
| One or more mild symptoms: | Complete chemotherapy infusion with supervision at bedside. No treatment required. |
| • mild flushing | |
| • rash | |
| • pruritis | |
| One or more moderate symptoms: | Stop chemotherapy infusion, venous infusion of antihistamine (Clemastine 2 mg IV and Dexamethasone 10 mg IV), → after recovery of symptoms resume paclitaxel infusion at a rate of 20 ml/h for 15 minutes then 50 ml/h for 15 minutes then, if no further symptoms, at full dose rate until infusion is complete. |
| • moderate rash | |
| • flushing | |
| • mild dyspnea | |
| • chest discomfort | |
| • mild hypotension | |
| One or more severe symptoms: | Stop chemotherapy infusion, give IV antihistamine and steroid as above. Add epinephrine or bronchodilators if indicated, report as an adverse event, the patient will go off protocol therapy. |
| • respiratory distress requiring treatment | |
| • generalized urticaria | |
| • angioedema | |
| • hypotension requiring therapy | |
toxic reactions and prescribed management
| Renal: | |
| Creatinin ≤ 1.5 × upper limit of normal at day of treatment | Continue treatment |
| Creatinin > 1.5 × upper limit of normal | Establish intravenous infusion the evening preciding treatment at a rate to correct any volume deficits and produce a urine flow ≥ ml/h. Repeat serum creatinin value in the morning: |
| ≤ 1.5 × upper limit of normal → proceed treatment | |
| > 1.5 × upper limit of normal → stop chemotherapy | |
| Gastrointestinal: | |
| Mucositis with oral ulcers or protracted vomiting despite antiemetic premedication | Delay chemotherapy one week |
| Neurologic: | |
| CTC grade ≤ 2 | Continue therapy |
| CTC grade > 2 | Stop chemotherapy |
| Cardiac: | |
| Asympotomatic bradycardia or isolated asymptomatic ventricular extrasystoles | Continue therapy under continuous cardiac monitoring |
| First degree AV block | Continue therapy under continuous cardiac monitoring |
| Symptomatic arrhythmia or AV block (except 1st degree) or other heart blocks | Stop chemotherapy, manage arrhythmia according to standard practice; patient goes off protocol |
CTC Common Toxicity Criteria