Introduction: Oral mucositis is a significant unmet clinical need for many cancer patients. The biological complexity of mucositis’ pathogenesis provides a number of mechanistic targets suitable as pharmacologic targets. The diversity of targets has stimulated drug development in search of an effective intervention. In this paper, we review a range of agents that are currently being evaluated.
Areas covered: Drugs for management of oral mucositis vary in formulation, route of administration and biological target. Most propose to interrupt the initiation of injury by suppressing activation of the innate immune response or countering oxidative stress, or minimizing downstream inflammatory responses. Overwhelmingly, the population most studied is patients being treated with concomitant chemoradiation for cancers of the head and neck as this is the cohort that most consistently suffers severe mucositis for long periods of time. The Phase 2 pipeline is robust. Preliminary data reported for a number of agents is optimistic. Genomics may be important in interpreting and comparing responses to agents across widely demographically diverse populations.
Expert opinion: Oral mucositis remains a significant toxicity for patients undergoing cancer treatment. Incremental reports of successes have been noted for a number of targeted agents. 相似文献
To conduct a systematic literature review of the reliability, construct validity, and responsiveness of the SF-36® Health Survey (SF-36) in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC).
Methods
We performed a systematic search of electronic medical databases to identify published peer-reviewed studies which reported scores from the eight scales and/or two summary measures of the SF-36 collected from adult patients with UC. Study findings relevant to reliability, construct validity, and responsiveness were reviewed.
Results
Data were extracted and summarized from 43 articles meeting inclusion criteria. Convergent validity was supported by findings that 83% (197/236) of correlations between SF-36 scales and measures of disease symptoms, disease activity, and functioning exceeded the prespecified threshold (r ≥ |0.40|). Known-groups validity was supported by findings of clinically meaningful differences in SF-36 scores between subgroups of patients when classified by disease activity (i.e., active versus inactive), symptom status, and comorbidity status. Responsiveness was supported by findings of clinically meaningful changes in SF-36 scores following treatment in non-comparative trials, and by meaningfully larger improvements in SF-36 scores in treatment arms relative to controls in randomized controlled trials. The sole study of SF-36 reliability found evidence supporting internal consistency (Cronbach’s α ≥ 0.70) for all SF-36 scales and test–retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient ≥0.70) for six of eight scales.
Conclusions
Evidence from this systematic literature review indicates that the SF-36 is reliable, valid, and responsive when used with UC patients, supporting the inclusion of the SF-36 as an endpoint in clinical trials for this patient population.
Little is known about the combined associations of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and hand grip strength (GS) with mortality in general adult populations. The purpose of this study was to compare the relative risk of mortality for CRF, GS, and their combination. In UK Biobank, a prospective cohort of >?0.5 million adults aged 40–69 years, CRF was measured through submaximal bike tests; GS was measured using a hand-dynamometer. This analysis is based on data from 70,913 men and women (832 all-cause, 177 cardiovascular and 503 cancer deaths over 5.7-year follow-up) who provided valid CRF and GS data, and with no history of heart attack/stroke/cancer at baseline. Compared with the lowest CRF category, the hazard ratio (HR) for all-cause mortality was 0.76 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.64–0.89] and 0.65 (95% CI 0.55–0.78) for the middle and highest CRF categories, respectively, after adjustment for confounders and GS. The highest GS category had an HR of 0.79 (95% CI 0.66–0.95) for all-cause mortality compared with the lowest, after adjustment for confounders and CRF. Similar results were found for cardiovascular and cancer mortality. The HRs for the combination of highest CRF and GS were 0.53 (95% CI 0.39–0.72) for all-cause mortality and 0.31 (95% CI 0.14–0.67) for cardiovascular mortality, compared with the reference category of lowest CRF and GS: no significant association for cancer mortality (HR 0.70; 95% CI 0.48–1.02). CRF and GS are both independent predictors of mortality. Improving both CRF and muscle strength, as opposed to either of the two alone, may be the most effective behavioral strategy to reduce all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk. 相似文献
Philadelphia chromosome–like (Ph-like) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a subset of high-risk B cell ALLs. A large proportion of Ph-like ALL cases carry activating kinase mutations that could potentially allow them to be targeted by tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Ph-like ALL is not an uncommon entity, especially among adults, with a frequency exceeding 20%, including in older patients (>60 years old) with ALL. Ph-like ALL is associated with inferior outcomes across all ages, and studies have consistently shown a higher incidence of persistent postinduction minimal residual disease in patients carrying Ph-like ALL compared with other subgroups of ALL, and this translates into inferior leukemia-related outcomes. The inferior outcome of conventional chemotherapy for Ph-like ALL in adults raises the fundamental question of whether all adults with Ph-like ALL require an allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) in first complete remission (CR1) regardless of other presenting features and treatment response parameters. Here we present and discuss several scenarios in which adults with Ph-like ALL underwent or were considered for HCT in CR1 for various reasons. Although the decision to proceed with HCT was clear and indisputable in some of these situations, in others we struggled with the decision to transplant in CR1 because of the lack of published data regarding the efficacy of allogeneic HCT as consolidation for Ph-like ALL. We emphasize the urgent need for developing well-designed studies to address this important question. 相似文献
Small molecule pharmacological inhibition of dominant human genetic disease is a feasible treatment that does not rely on the development of individual, patient‐specific gene therapy vectors. However, the consequences of protein inhibition as a clinical therapeutic are not well‐studied. In advance of human therapeutic trials for CAPN5 vitreoretinopathy, genetic inactivation can be used to infer the effect of protein inhibition in vivo. We created a photoreceptor‐specific knockout (KO) mouse for Capn5 and compared the retinal phenotype to both wild‐type and an existing Capn5 KO mouse model. In humans, CAPN5 loss‐of‐function (LOF) gene variants were ascertained in large exome databases from 60,706 unrelated subjects without severe disease phenotypes. Ocular examination of the retina of Capn5 KO mice by histology and electroretinography showed no significant abnormalities. In humans, there were 22 LOF CAPN5 variants located throughout the gene and in all major protein domains. Structural modeling of coding variants showed these LOF variants were nearby known disease‐causing variants within the proteolytic core and in regions of high homology between human CAPN5 and 150 homologs, yet the LOF of CAPN5 was tolerated as opposed to gain‐of‐function disease‐causing variants. These results indicate that localized inhibition of CAPN5 is a viable strategy for hyperactivating disease alleles. 相似文献
HLA haplotype mismatches have been associated with an elevated risk of acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) in patients undergoing HLA-matched unrelated donor (URD) hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). The gamma block (GB) is located in the central MHC region between beta and delta blocks (encoding HLA-B and -C and HLA-DQ and -DR antigens, respectively) and contains numerous inflammatory and immune regulatory genes, including Bf, C2, and C4 genes. A single-center study showed that mismatches in SNPs c.2918+98G, c.3316C, and c.4385C in the GB block (C4 SNPs) were associated with higher risk of grade III-IV aGVHD. We investigated the association of GB SNP (GBS) mismatches with outcomes after 10/10 and 9/10 URD HCT (n?=?714). The primary outcome was acute GVHD. Overall survival, disease-free survival, transplantation-related mortality, relapse, chronic GVHD, and engraftment were also analyzed. DNA samples were GBS genotyped by identifying 338 SNPs across 20 kb using the Illumina NGS platform. The overall 100-day incidence of aGVHD grade II-IV and II-IV were 41% and 17%, respectively. The overall incidence of matching at all GBSs tested and at the C4 SNPs were 23% and 81%, respectively. Neither being matched across all GB SNPs tested (versus mismatched) nor having a higher number of GBS mismatches was associated with transplantation outcomes. There was no association between C4 SNP mismatches and outcomes except for an unexpected significant association between having 2 C4 SNP mismatches and a higher hazard ratio (HR) for relapse (association seen in 15 patients only; HR, 3.38, 95% confidence interval, 1.75 to 6.53; P?=?.0003). These data do not support the hypothesis that mismatching at GB is associated with outcomes after HCT. 相似文献