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Burkitt lymphoma (BL) is the most common B-cell lymphoma in children. Within the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC), we performed whole genome and transcriptome sequencing of 39 sporadic BL. Here, we unravel interaction of structural, mutational, and transcriptional changes, which contribute to MYC oncogene dysregulation together with the pathognomonic IG-MYC translocation. Moreover, by mapping IGH translocation breakpoints, we provide evidence that the precursor of at least a subset of BL is a B-cell poised to express IGHA. We describe the landscape of mutations, structural variants, and mutational processes, and identified a series of driver genes in the pathogenesis of BL, which can be targeted by various mechanisms, including IG-non MYC translocations, germline and somatic mutations, fusion transcripts, and alternative splicing.
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder with 22 disease-causing genes reported to date. In some FA genes, monoallelic mutations have been found to be associated with breast cancer risk, while the risk associations of others remain unknown. The gene for FA type C, FANCC, has been proposed as a breast cancer susceptibility gene based on epidemiological and sequencing studies. We used the Oncoarray project to genotype two truncating FANCC variants (p.R185X and p.R548X) in 64,760 breast cancer cases and 49,793 controls of European descent. FANCC mutations were observed in 25 cases (14 with p.R185X, 11 with p.R548X) and 26 controls (18 with p.R185X, 8 with p.R548X). There was no evidence of an association with the risk of breast cancer, neither overall (odds ratio 0.77, 95%CI 0.44–1.33, p = 0.4) nor by histology, hormone receptor status, age or family history. We conclude that the breast cancer risk association of these two FANCC variants, if any, is much smaller than for BRCA1, BRCA2 or PALB2 mutations. If this applies to all truncating variants in FANCC it would suggest there are differences between FA genes in their roles on breast cancer risk and demonstrates the merit of large consortia for clarifying risk associations of rare variants.
Background
Guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) is the cornerstone in the treatment of patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) and novel substances such as sacubitril/valsartan (S/V) and sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have demonstrated marked clinical benefits. We investigated their implementation into real-world HF care in Germany before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic period.
Methods
The IQVIA LRx data set is based on ∼80% of 73 million people covered by the German statutory health insurance. Prescriptions of S/V were used as a proxy for HFrEF. Time trends were analysed between Q1/2016 and Q2/2023 for prescriptions for S/V alone and in combination therapy with SGLT2i.
Findings
The number of patients treated with S/V increased from 5260 in Q1/2016 to 351,262 in Q2/2023. The share of patients with combination therapy grew from 0.6% (29 of 5260) to 14.2% (31,128 of 219,762) in Q2/2021, and then showed a steep surge up to 54.8% (192,429 of 351,262) in Q2/2023, coinciding with the release of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines for HF in Q3/2021. Women and patients aged >80 years were treated less often with combined therapy than men and younger patients. With the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of patients with new S/V prescriptions dropped by 17.5% within one quarter, i.e., from 26,855 in Q1/2020 to 22,145 in Q2/2020, and returned to pre-pandemic levels only in Q1/2021.
Interpretation
The COVID-19 pandemic was associated with a 12-month deceleration of S/V uptake in Germany. Following the release of the ESC HF guidelines, the combined prescription of S/V and SGLT2i was readily adopted. Further efforts are needed to fully implement GDMT and strengthen the resilience of healthcare systems during public health crises.
Background:
Cancer patients often suffer from psychological symptoms and need psychological support. Especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, eHealth interventions might be helpful to overcome the obstacles of the pandemic. This study evaluates the effectiveness of a video sequence-based eHealth intervention on anxiety, fatigue, and depression in cancer patients.
Methods:
Patients (N = 157) with different tumor entities were randomly assigned to the video intervention group (IG) and the waiting control group (CG). Patients in the IG received a video intervention comprising 8 video sequences over 4 weeks. The videos included psychoeducation on distress and psychological symptoms, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy elements, and Yoga and Qigong exercises. Patients’ anxiety and fear of progression (primary outcomes) and secondary outcomes were assessed before randomization (T1) and after the end of the intervention for IG or the waiting period for CG (T2) using self-reported questionnaires (GAD-7, PA-F-KF, EORTC QLQ-FA12, PHQ-8).
Results:
Patients of the IG showed no significant improvement in anxiety (GAD-7; P = .75), fear of progression (FoP-Q-SF; P = .29), fatigue (EORTC QLQ-FA12; P = .72), and depression (PHQ-8; P = .95) compared to patients in the waiting CG. However, symptoms of anxiety, fatigue, and depression decreased in both groups. Exploratory subgroup analysis regarding sex, therapy status, therapy goal, and tumor entity showed no effects. Overall, the intervention had a high level of acceptance.
Conclusions:
The video intervention was ineffective in reducing the psychological burden compared to a waiting CG. The findings support prior observations of the value of therapeutic guidance and promoting self-management for improving patients’ psychological burdens. Further studies are required to evaluate the effectiveness of psycho-oncological eHealth delivered through video sequences.
Purpose
To evaluate the technical and clinical outcome of Sinus-XL stent placement in patients with malignant obstruction syndrome of the inferior vena cava.
Methods
Between October 2010 and January 2021, 21 patients with different malignant primary disease causing inferior vena cava obstruction were treated with Sinus-XL stent implantation. Procedural data, technical and clinical outcome parameters were retrospectively analyzed.
Results
Technical success was 100%. Analysis of available manometry data revealed a significant reduction of the mean translesional pressure gradient following the procedure (p = 0.008). Reintervention rate was 4.8% (1/21). The available follow-up imaging studies showed primary and primary-assisted stent patency rates of 93% (13/14) and 100% (14/14), respectively. Major complications did not occur. The clinical success regarding lower extremity edema was 82.4% (14/17) for the first and 85.7% (18/21) for the last follow-up. Longer lengths of IVC obstruction were associated with reduced clinical improvement after the procedure (p = 0.025). Improvement of intraprocedural manometry results and lower extremity edema revealed only minor correlation. Ascites and anasarca were not significantly positively affected by the procedure.
Conclusion
Sinus-XL stent placement in patients with malignant inferior vena cava obstruction showed high technical success and low complication rates. Regarding the clinical outcome, significant symptom improvement could be achieved in lower extremity edema, whereas ascites and anasarca lacked satisfying symptom relief. Based on our results, this procedure should be considered as a suitable therapy in a palliative care setting for patients with advanced malignant disease.
Despite high levels of distress, family caregivers of patients with cancer rarely seek psychosocial support and Internet-based interventions (IBIs) are a promising approach to reduce some access barriers. Therefore, we developed a self-guided IBI for family caregivers of patients with cancer (OAse), which, in addition to patients' spouses, also addresses other family members (e.g., adult children, parents). This study aimed to determine the feasibility of OAse (recruitment, dropout, adherence, participant satisfaction). Secondary outcomes were caregivers’ self-efficacy, emotional state, and supportive care needs. N = 41 family caregivers participated in the study (female: 65%), mostly spouses (71%), followed by children (20%), parents (7%), and friends (2%). Recruitment (47%), retention (68%), and adherence rates (76% completed at least 4 of 6 lessons) support the feasibility of OAse. Overall, the results showed a high degree of overall participant satisfaction (96%). There were no significant pre-post differences in secondary outcome criteria, but a trend toward improvement in managing difficult interactions/emotions (p = .06) and depression/anxiety (p = .06). Although the efficacy of the intervention remains to be investigated, our results suggest that OAse can be well implemented in caregivers’ daily lives and has the potential to improve family caregivers’ coping strategies.
Objective
The admission interview in oncological inpatient rehabilitation might be a good opportunity to identify cancer patients' needs present after acute treatment. However, a relevant number of patients may not express their needs. In this study, we examined (a) the proportion of cancer patients with unexpressed needs, (b) topics of unexpressed needs and reasons for not expressing needs, (c) correlations of not expressing needs with several patient characteristics, and (d) predictors of not expressing needs.
Methods
We enrolled 449 patients with breast, prostate, and colon cancer at beginning and end of inpatient rehabilitation. We obtained self‐reports about unexpressed needs and health‐related variables (quality of life, depression, anxiety, adjustment disorder, and health literacy). We estimated frequencies and conducted correlation and ordinal logistic regression analyses.
Results
A quarter of patients stated they had “rather not” or “not at all” expressed all relevant needs. Patients mostly omitted fear of cancer recurrence. Most frequent reasons for not expressing needs were being focused on physical consequences of cancer, concerns emerging only later, and not knowing about the possibility of talking about distress. Not expressing needs was associated with several health‐related outcomes, for example, emotional functioning, adjustment disorder, fear of progression, and health literacy. Depression measured at the beginning of rehabilitation showed only small correlations and is therefore not sufficient to identify patients with unexpressed needs.
Conclusions
A relevant proportion of cancer patients reported unexpressed needs in the admission interview. This was associated with decreased mental health. Therefore, it seems necessary to support patients in expressing needs.
Objective
In order to optimize psycho‐oncological care, studies that quantify the extent of distress and identify certain risk groups are needed. Among patients with prostate cancer (PCa), findings on depression and anxiety are limited.
Methods
We analyzed data of PCa patients selected from a German multi‐center study. Depression and anxiety were assessed with the PHQ‐9 and the GAD‐7 (cut‐off ≥7). We provided physical symptom burden, calculated absolute and relative risk (AR and RR) of depression and anxiety across patient subsets and between patients and the general population (GP) and tested age as a moderator within the relationship of disease‐specific symptoms with depression and anxiety.
Results
Among 636 participants, the majority reported disease‐specific problems (sexuality: 60%; urination: 52%). AR for depression and anxiety was 23% and 22%, respectively. Significant RR were small, with higher risks of distress in patients who are younger (eg, RR\(_{depression}\) = 1.15; 95%‐CI: 1.06‐1.26), treated with chemotherapy (RR\(_{depression}\)n = 1.46; 95%‐CI: 1.09‐1.96) or having metastases (RR\(_{depression}\) = 1.30; 95%‐CI: 1.02‐1.65). Risk of distress was slightly elevated compared to GP (eg, RR\(_{depression}\) = 1.13; 95%‐CI: 1.07‐1.19). Age moderated the relationship between symptoms and anxiety (B\(_{urination}\) = −0.10, P = .02; B\(_{sexuality}\) = −0.11, P = .01).
Conclusions
Younger patients, those with metastases or treatment with chemotherapy seem to be at elevated risk for distress and should be closely monitored. Many patients suffer from disease‐specific symptom burden, by which younger patients seem to be particularly distressed. Support of coping mechanisms associated with disease‐specific symptom burden seems warranted.
Panobinostat is an oral pan-histone deacetylase inhibitor developed by Novartis. Panobinostat acts via epigenetic modification and inhibition of the aggresome pathway. In August 2015, the European Commission authorized panobinostat for use in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone for the treatment of relapsed or relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma (MM) in patients who have received aeyen2 prior regimens including bortezomib and an immunomodulatory drug. In January 2016, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence recommended panobinostat for use in the same combination and patient population. The authorization and recommendation were based on results from the pivotal phase 3 PANORAMA 1 (NCT01023308) clinical trial, which demonstrated an improvement in median progression-free survival of 7.8 months for the three-drug combination compared with placebo plus bortezomib and dexamethasone in this patient population. This review will discuss the current treatment landscape for relapsed/refractory MM, the mechanism of action of panobinostat, clinical data supporting the European authorization, concerns about safety and strategies for mitigating toxicity, and how panobinostat fits into the current MM landscape in Europe.
Im Rahmen von Krebserkrankungen müssen zahlreiche medizinische Entscheidungen getroffen werden. Das Bedürfnis der Patienten, an solchen Entscheidungen zu partizipieren, ist individuell unterschiedlich und für Ärzte häufig schwer einschätzbar. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist eine bessere Vorhersage der Partizipationsbedürfnisse von Krebspatienten und die Untersuchung von Effekten des Partizipationsbedürfnisses auf die Lebensqualität.
Die zelltoxische Wirkung von AVEMAR, einem medizinischen Nahrungsergänzungsmittel, wurde erstmalig an einer Vielzahl humaner Tumorzelllinien systematisch untersucht. Die einzelnen Tumorzelllinien reagierten sehr unterschiedlich auf die Inkubation mit AVEMAR. So weisen vier der zwölf Tumorzelllinien (33 %) einen EC50-Wert von mehr als 50 mg/ml auf und waren somit resistent gegenüber AVEMAR, während fünf der zwölf Tumorzelllinien (42 %) einen EC50 Wert von <10 mg/ml aufweisen. Für drei Zelllinien wurde ein EC50-Wert zwischen >10 und <25 mg/ml nachgewiesen. Zwischen der Wachstumsgeschwindigkeit der Zellen und ihrer Empfindlichkeit gegenüber dem AVEMAR-Effekt war kein Zusammenhang zu erkennen; ebenso wurde ausgeschlossen, dass der AVEMAR Effekt auf einer unspezifischen Wirkung beruht. Zur weiteren Untersuchung wurden vier der zwölf Zelllinien ausgewählt: BxPC-3 (EC50: 4,9 +/- 0,42 mg/ml); 23132/87 (EC50: 9,3 +/- 0,28 mg/ml); HT-29 (EC50: 15,35 +/- 0,21 mg/ml) und HRT-18 (EC50: 21,3 +/- 0,42 mg/ml). Die Wirkung von 10 mg/ml AVEMAR auf diese vier Zelllinien war nach einer Inkubationsdauer von 24 Stunden: zelltoxisch (BxPC-3), zytostatisch (23132/87 und HT-29) und schwach zytostatisch (HRT-18). Insbesondere für HRT-18 war der zytostatische Effekt von AVEMAR begrenzt und bereits nach 48 Stunden in Kultur ohne AVEMAR nicht mehr zu beobachten. Im Gegensatz dazu war der zelltoxische Effekt von AVEMAR auf Zellen der Linie BxPC-3 extrem rasch (<24 Stunden) und absolut irreversibel. Dieser zelltoxische Effekt ähnelt der Wirkungsweise von 2,6-Dimethoxy-1,4-Benzochinonen, wobei nicht geklärt ist, ob reaktive Sauerstoffspezies oder andere Formen von Radikalen, z.B. Stickstoffradikale, entstehen. Diese Vermutung wird dadurch gestützt, dass ausschließlich Glutathion, welches als Radikalfänger an zahlreichen enzymabhängigen Reduktionsreaktionen beteiligt ist, die zelltoxische Wirkung von AVEMAR kompensieren konnte. Katalase, die die Detoxifikation von Wasserstoffperoxid katalysiert, zeigte in Gegenwart von AVEMAR keine Wirkung, war aber in Gegenwart von Benzochinonen wirksam. Da bei oxidativem Stress auch Wasserstoffperoxid entsteht, scheint die zelltoxische Wirkung von AVEMAR bei BxPC-3 nicht auf Auslösung von oxidativem Stress zu beruhen, sondern auf der Induktion von Radikalen bzw. toxischen Metaboliten anderer Art. Der bei den Tumorzelllinien 23132/87 und HT-29 beobachtete, weniger aggressive zytostatische Effekt von AVEMAR basiert nicht auf der Induktion freier Radikale, da Glutathion ohne Wirkung war. Mit der Zytostase einhergehend war eine deutliche Verringerung des intrazellulären ATP-Gehalts um bis zu 60 % bei 10 mg/ml bzw. 100 % bei 50 mg/ml AVEMAR. Zusätzlich zur Wirkung von AVEMAR wurden weitere Weizenprodukte auf mögliche zelltoxische bzw. zytostatische Effekte getestet und zwar Weizenkeimlinge, handelsübliches Weizenmehl vom Typ 405 und Weizenlektine. Interessanterweise wurde je nach Zelllinie auch für diese Weizenprodukte ein zelltoxischer Effekt in vitro nachgewiesen. AVEMAR weist zelltoxische und zytostatische Effekte auf. Beide Effekte werden nicht über oxidativen Stress vermittelt. Die zelltoxische Wirkung von AVEMAR wird durch Nicht-Sauerstoffradikale bzw. toxische Metabolite vermittelt. Damit wurde der postulierte Hauptmechanismus von AVEMAR - nämlich die Induktion von oxidativem Stress durch Benzochinone - nicht bestätigt. AVEMAR stellt ein nebenwirkungsarmes, gut verträgliches und günstiges Nahrungsergänzungsmittel dar. Die vorliegende Arbeit, aber auch klinische Studien haben eine Wirksamkeit von AVEMAR gegenüber Tumoren gezeigt. Da zahlreiche onkologische Patienten sehr motiviert sind, neben der Chemo- und Radiotherapie, weitere Maßnahmen gegen ihr Krebsleiden zu ergreifen, sind Empfehlungen von Supportivprodukten, deren zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen weitestgehend aufgeklärt sind und für die ein wissenschaftlicher Nachweis ihrer Wirksamkeit vorliegt, sicherlich ein zu begrüßender Schritt zur ganzheitlichen Betreuung onkologischer Patienten.
Durch die Einführung eines neuen fallpauschalierten Abrechnungssystems (Diangnosis related groups, DRG) sowie zahlreiche neue Maßnahmen der Qualitätssicherung wächst der Anteil administrativer Tätigkeiten für die klinisch tätigen Ärztinnen und Ärzte. Diese Entwicklung hat nicht zuletzt auch Auswirkungen auf die zeitlichen Ressourcen, die für die ärztlichen Kernaufgaben zur Verfügung stehen. In Bereichen mit intensiver klinischer Forschung steigen darüberhinaus auch die Anforderungen an die forschungsbegleitende Dokumentation. Eine effiziente Unterstützung bei der Kalkulation, Planung und Durchführung von Therapien durch Informationstechnologische (IT-) Systeme kann eine sinnvolle Entlastung der Ärzte darstellen. Es wurde ein einsatzfähiger Prototyp entwickelt, prgrammiert und implementiert. Anschließend wurde das Ergebnis mit potentiellen Anwendern der Software evaluiert.