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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Docetaxel
(75 mg m(-2) 3-weekly) is standard second-line treatment in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with significant toxicity. To verify whether a weekly schedule (33.3 mg m(-2) for 6 weeks) improved quality of life (QoL), a phase III study was performed with 220 advanced NSCLC patients, < or =75 years, ECOG PS < or =2. QoL was assessed by EORTC questionnaires and the Daily Diary Card (DDC). No difference was found in global QoL scores at 3 weeks. Pain,
cough
and hair loss significantly favoured the weekly schedule, while diarrhoea was worse. DDC analysis showed that loss of appetite and overall condition were significantly worse in the 3-week arm in the first week, while nausea and loss of appetite were more severe in the weekly arm in the third week. Response rate and survival were similar, hazard ratio of death in the weekly arm being 1.04 (95% CI 0.77-1.39). A 3-weekly docetaxel was more toxic for leukopenia, neutropenia, febrile neutropenia and hair loss; any grade 3-4 haematologic toxicity was significantly more frequent in the standard arm (25 vs 6%). The weekly schedule could be preferred for patients candidate to receive docetaxel as second-line treatment for advanced NSCLC, because of some QoL advantages, lower toxicity and no evidence of strikingly different effect on survival.
...
PMID:A randomised clinical trial of two docetaxel regimens (weekly vs 3 week) in the second-line treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer. The DISTAL 01 study. 1555 71
We herein report a 75-year-old patient with recurrent hormone-nonresponsive, HER2-positive breast cancer who presented with multiple lung metastases. She had undergone a mastectomy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy with FEC, CMF, and UFT. Forty-six months after the surgery, multiple lung, liver, and bone metastases were observed.
Docetaxel
and trastuzumab were administered as first-line chemotherapy for 13 months. A partial response and stable disease were observed, but progressive disease in the lung and brain was subsequently revealed. The patient then underwent g-knife treatment for brain metastasis. Lapatinib and capecitabine treatment was administered as second-line chemotherapy for 9 months. Stable disease was observed, but progressive disease in the lung metastases with clinical symptoms including
cough
, exertional dyspnea, and general malaise was revealed. As third-line chemotherapy, the patient was administered low-dose, bi-weekly nab-paclitaxel(150mg/m2)and trastuzumab therapy. Four weeks after beginning the nab-paclitaxel and trastuzumab treatment, the
cough
disappeared; 2 months after beginning the therapy, a partialresponse in the lung metastases was seen. The patient is well and the treatment has been continued for 50 weeks. No progression has been seen. Bi-weekly nab-paclitaxel treatment appears to have few side effects and might be an effective treatment option for patients with recurrent breast cancer.
...
PMID:[Bi-weekly nab-paclitaxel and trastuzumab therapy effective against recurrent breast cancer with multiple lung metastases in elderly patient who had previously undergone two chemotherapeutic regimens for treatment of metastatic disease-a case Report]. 2315 23
A 61-year-old man with
cough
and white sputum had an abnormal pulmonary mass in the left lower lobe in the computed tomography (CT) imaging. According to the lung cancer multidisciplinary team (MDT) discussion, the patient took the left lower lobe resection and lymphadenectomy and finally diagnosed as left lung adenocarcinoma with TNM stage IIIA (pT3N2M0). After four cycles of postoperative chemotherapy with pemetrexed and nedaplatin and 10-month release, a solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN) appeared in the middle lobe of right lung in CT scanning. The patient took a second operation "the right middle lobe resection" and was diagnosed as left lung adenocarcinoma at TNM stage IV (pT3N2M1a, two lungs) with neither EGFR mutation nor ALK-EML4 fusion gene. After operation, the patient took another four cycles of postoperative chemotherapy with
Docetaxel
and Nedaplatin. During the follow-up, another PET/CT scanning reported that several enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes, a SPN in left upper lobe and lesion in cerebellum and the brain metastasis was also proved in MRI. The patient was now diagnosed as left lung adenocarcinoma at TNM stage IV (pT3N2M1b, brain). In the third-line therapy, the patient took the stereotactic radiotherapy for metastatic mediastinal lymph nodes and took erlotinib once a day after the radiotherapy. However, the number of small lesions on lungs was increased and the brain metastasis was enlarged. The stereotactic radiotherapy for the single brain metastasis and single agent chemotherapy of abraxane were taken. The whole body examination suggested that there was progression-free after two cycles of chemo. The patient is now took five cycles of single agent chemotherapy of abraxane. The latest whole body examination showed disease was stable with no new lesions and metastasis, performance status (PS) score is 0 and the overall survival (OS) time is 34 months.
...
PMID:A 61-year-old man with cough and white sputum. 2580 49