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Prior preclinical studies showed promising antitumor activity and an acceptable safety profile associated with radiopharmaceuticals for patients with metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cervix cancers. Whether the addition of a radiopharmaceutical to chemotherapy would significantly increase progression-free survival in such patients is untested. Our retrospective study sought to associate the line of treatment and progression-free survival as benchmarks for next-generation radiopharmaceutical development. We grouped metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cervix cancer patients not amenable to curable surgery or radiotherapy between 2002 and 2023 by the line of doublet, triplet, and quadruplet chemotherapy or another intervention. After the first-line treatment, patients were monitored for radiographic progression every three months for up to three years. The primary endpoints were the first and any second or third progression-free survival intervals. A total of 127 patients contributed demographic, tumor, line of treatment, and outcome data with a median follow-up of 18 months (25-75% interquartile range: 9 to 37 months). After the first-line treatment, 113 patients had local or distant progression or died from any cause, most often death from the disease (67%). Median progression-free survivals were 5.5 months (95% confidence interval: 4.8-6.0 months), 5.3 months (95% confidence interval: 4.5-6.3 months), and 3.0 months (95% confidence interval: 2.1-3.7 months) for the first-, second-, and third-line treatments, respectively. For a first-line cisplatin-containing regimen, the median progression-free survival was 6.5 months (95% confidence interval: 5.5-7.7 months). This study highlights the limited efficacy of current treatments for metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cancer patients. A five-month progression-free survival might serve as a benchmark for the development of novel therapies in clinical efficacy trials, such as radiopharmaceuticals.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers16193319 | DOI Listing |
J Neurooncol
September 2025
Sunnybrook Research Institute, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Purpose: Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent cancer among women and the second leading cause of central nervous system (CNS) metastases. While the epidemiology of CNS metastases from BC has been well described, little is known about the treatment patterns and outcomes of young women < 40 years of age with BC that is metastatic to the CNS.
Methods: In this retrospective analysis, we identified patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) to the CNS who were treated at the Sunnybrook Odette Cancer Center, Toronto, Canada between 2008 and 2018.
J Neurooncol
September 2025
Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Brain and Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Tottori, Japan.
Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic significance of microvessel density (MVD), assessed by CD34 immunohistochemistry (IHC), and its correlation with radiological features and bevacizumab (BEV) treatment efficacy in newly diagnosed glioblastoma.
Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 41 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma. MVD was quantified using CD34 IHC, and patients were stratified into low and high MVD groups according to the cutoff value determined by receiver operating characteristic curve analysis (sensitivity, 76.
Ann Surg Oncol
September 2025
Department of Gastroenterological and Transplant Surgery, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) frequently invades the portal vein, leading to early recurrence and a poor prognosis. However, the mechanisms underlying this invasion remain unclear. In this study, we aimed to detect portal vein circulating tumor cells (CTCs) using a Glypican-3-positive detection method and evaluate their prognostic significance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging
September 2025
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Changhai Hospital, Naval Medical University, 168 Changhai Road, Yang Pu District, Shanghai, 200433, China.
Purpose: In this retrospective study, whether [Ga]Ga-DOTA-FAPI-04 PET/MR imaging biomarkers can predict the progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) of patients with advanced pancreatic cancer was investigated.
Methods: Fifty-one patients who underwent [Ga]Ga-DOTA-FAPI-04 PET/MR scans before first-line chemotherapy were recruited. Imaging biomarkers, including the maximum tumor diameter, minimum apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), maximum and mean standardized uptake values (SUV and SUV), fibroblast activation protein- (FAP-) positive tumor volume (FTV and W-FTV) and total lesion FAP expression (TLF and W-TLF), were recorded for primary and whole-body tumors.
J Thorac Oncol
September 2025
Institut du Thorax Curie-Montsouris, Paris, France; Paris-Saclay University, UVSQ-Versailles, France.
Introduction: Amivantamab plus lazertinib significantly improved progression-free and overall survival versus osimertinib in patients with previously untreated, EGFR-mutant advanced NSCLC. EGFR-targeted therapies are associated with dermatologic adverse events (AEs), which can affect quality of life (QoL). COCOON was conducted to assess prophylactic management and improve treatment experience.
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