September 2012, Vol 5, No 8

Page 1

SEPTEMBER 2012

www.TheOncologyNurse.com

VOL 5, NO 8

PROSTATE CANCER

Cedars-Sinai’s Samuel Oschin Progress in Treating Prostate Comprehensive Cancer Institute Cancer CANCER CENTER PROFILE

Blood and Marrow Transplant Program

By Alice Goodman

By Alice Goodman

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wo studies presented at the 2012 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting suggested that abiraterone acetate (AA; Zytiga), an androgen biosynthesis inhibitor,1 has the potential to be used earlier in the course of prostate cancer than its current US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) indication (ie, after failure of chemotherapy in men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer [CRPC]). A second interim analysis of a phase 3 trial had positive outcomes with AA in men with metastatic CRPC

who had not yet received chemotherapy,1 and a preliminary phase 2 study suggested AA may have a role in the neoadjuvant setting before radical prostatectomy is performed in men with early-stage localized high-risk prostate cancer.2 In addition, secondary results from the AFFIRM trial confirmed the superiority of enzalutamide to placebo in men with CRPC following treatment with docetaxel.3 Abiraterone in Chemotherapy-Naive Metastatic CRPC1 Results of the second interim analysis Continued on page 10

Laura Snoussi, RN, BSN, OCN; Anne Rosenblatt, RN, MSN; Carolina Caso, RN, BSN, CPON; Marguerita Guerrero, RN, BSN, OCN; Seda Gharapetian, RN, MSN, FNP, OCN; and Patricia Van Strien, RN, BSN, OCN, CHTC (left to right), oncology nurses with the Blood and Marrow Transplant Program at Cedars-Sinai’s Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute. Photo courtesy of Cedars-Sinai.

he Blood and Marrow Transplant Program was established at Cedars-Sinai’s Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute in 1991 to provide stem cell transplants to patients with breast cancer. The program fell into a lull when transplant was proven ineffective for breast cancer, but about 10 years later it had a resurgence under the directorship of Michael Lill, MD, who joined the center in 1997. In 2002, the first allogeneic transplants were performed there. Now the program has grown to include 6 medical doctors and 6 nurse coordinators. An expected 140 transplants will be performed in 2012. The largest group of transplant patients is those with multiple myeloma, followed by those with lymphoma and leukemia.

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Continued on page 22

THE PATIENT’S VOICE

Caring for the Caregivers By MMA

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n an ideal world, all sick people would have a caregiver who could keep them company and give at least minimal medical care 24/7, or even 8/7. Unfortunately, because of the way society (at least in the United States) is organized, work demands, financial demands, geographical dispersion of family members, and the nature of medical care make that impossible for many. In my hospital, I see many solitary, lonely

patients who most probably have many loved ones who would, if they could, be with their sick relative. My luck was different. I have 2 sons older than 18. At the time I was diagnosed, one had just finished his third semester in college and the other had just found his first postcollege job. Both temporarily suspended their own lives to be with me. One took a semester off college and the other took a temporary leave

NEWS BRIEFS

Continued on page 8

By Alice Goodman

INSIDE

Surgery Versus Observation for Localized Prostate Cancer For men with localized prostate cancer detected by prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level, treatment with radical prostatectomy did not significantly reduce mortality compared with observation, according to overall results of the large, randomized, controlled PIVOT trial (Wilt TJ, et al. N Engl J Med. 2012; 367:203-213). All-cause mortality and prostate-specific mortality were similar

Side effect ManageMent

for the surgery and observation groups over a 12-year follow-up. Results suggest that surgery may be a better option than observation for men with intermediateand high-risk localized prostate cancer, but low-risk localized prostate cancer can be safely managed with observation. Overall, absolute differences in mortality favoring surgery were less than 3

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genetic counSeling

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CIPN Increases Risk of Falls and Physical and Functional Problems Severe Diarrhea Associated With Molecularly Targeted Agents Can Impact Quality of Life and Healthcare Resource Utilization

Hereditary Cancer Support Organizations

iMMune throMbocytopenia

the patient’S Voice

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Considerations for Treatment

Continued on page 4 ©2012 Green Hill Healthcare Communications, LLC

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coMpliMentary ce

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Considerations in Lymphoma—Ask the Experts: Follicular Lymphoma .........

Popping Pills and Shooting Up

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