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Full-Text Articles in Oncology

Evaluating A Novel Patient Intake Model For Newly Referred Patients Seeking Cancer Care: An Evidence-Based Practice Project, Roquinna Serna, Stella Fernandez, Morgan Nestingen, Stephen Breazeale Dec 2023

Evaluating A Novel Patient Intake Model For Newly Referred Patients Seeking Cancer Care: An Evidence-Based Practice Project, Roquinna Serna, Stella Fernandez, Morgan Nestingen, Stephen Breazeale

Nursing & Health Sciences Research Journal

Introduction: Cancer survivors must engage in a complex medical system that requires coordinating care, traveling for treatment, obtaining referrals, and scheduling multiple appointments with various teams. Cancer care facilities are implementing oncology navigation programs that help survivors navigate barriers in complex cancer care systems. However, new patients require additional support prior to their first visit. This article aims to describe the development and design of Miami Cancer Institute’s (MCI) Intake NOW program and evaluate its effects on scheduling-related outcomes among individuals seeking to establish cancer care. Methods: We conducted a retrospective data analysis before and after the MCI Intake NOW …


Cancer Patient Beliefs And Attitudes Regarding Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy, Nedal Darwish, Delaney C. Stuhr, Haily M. Datz, Halima Bakillah, Tenzin Tseky, Mohamed Manaa, Serge Dauphin Sep 2022

Cancer Patient Beliefs And Attitudes Regarding Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy, Nedal Darwish, Delaney C. Stuhr, Haily M. Datz, Halima Bakillah, Tenzin Tseky, Mohamed Manaa, Serge Dauphin

Advances in Clinical Medical Research and Healthcare Delivery

The development and widespread use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have advanced the field of oncology in a short period of time. Despite this, patient perception regarding this new medication class has not been adequately assessed, which may affect treatment decisions and adherence. The Belief about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) is a validated survey composed of 18 questions which analyzes patient’s beliefs about the necessity of prescribed medication and concern about the potential adverse events caused by the medication. General medication overuse and harm are also determined. This is the first study to utilize the BMQ for patients on ICI therapy.


Conference Proceedings: Select Abstracts Presented At 2021 Advocate Aurora Health Scientific Day Oct 2021

Conference Proceedings: Select Abstracts Presented At 2021 Advocate Aurora Health Scientific Day

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Abstracts published within this supplement were presented at the 47th annual Advocate Aurora Health Scientific Day, held virtually on May 26, 2021. This research symposium provides a forum for disseminating results from studies conducted by faculty, fellows, residents, and other allied health professionals associated with Midwest-based health system Advocate Aurora Health, which publishes the Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews.


Improving Code Response Time Through Strategic Positioning Of Nursing House Supervisors: Results Of A Nurse-Led Intervention, Noah R. Zanville, Paula T. Smith, Albis A. Aguiar, Joan Simon-Smith, Jessenia Menendez, Alice J. Cockerel, Rosalina P. Butao, Marguerite Rowell Dec 2020

Improving Code Response Time Through Strategic Positioning Of Nursing House Supervisors: Results Of A Nurse-Led Intervention, Noah R. Zanville, Paula T. Smith, Albis A. Aguiar, Joan Simon-Smith, Jessenia Menendez, Alice J. Cockerel, Rosalina P. Butao, Marguerite Rowell

Nursing & Health Sciences Research Journal

Background: In many settings, the nursing house supervisors (NHS) are a critical part of the entity’s code response team. To date, much of the research on code response has focused on improving response times through staff-focused interventions such as simulation training. However, use of data to determine where to physically place NHS in the building to optimize code response times has received little attention, especially in an outpatient oncology setting.

Purpose: To test whether using data on code frequency/location to strategically position NHS could reduce mean code response times in large (450,000-ft2) outpatient cancer center.

Methods: Data on code volume, …


Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2020 Oct 2020

Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2020

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Abstracts published in this supplement were among those presented at the 46th annual Aurora Scientific Day research symposium, held virtually on May 20, 2020. The symposium provides a forum for describing research studies conducted by faculty, fellows, residents, and allied health professionals affiliated with Wisconsin-based Aurora Health Care, a part of the Advocate Aurora Health health system, which publishes the Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews.


Financial Conflicts Of Interest Change After A High-Impact Clinical Trial Publication In Oncology, Craig L. Cambridge, Emily Stern Gatof, Glen J. Weiss, Roger B. Davis Jul 2020

Financial Conflicts Of Interest Change After A High-Impact Clinical Trial Publication In Oncology, Craig L. Cambridge, Emily Stern Gatof, Glen J. Weiss, Roger B. Davis

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Purpose: Because financial conflicts of interest (FCOIs) may potentially influence patient care, hospital drug formularies, and treatment guidelines, it is important that these are disclosed. The purpose of this observational study was to quantify the changes in FCOI among U.S.-based academic authors in industry-sponsored oncology trials after a high-impact publication.

Methods: A list of all U.S.-based academic authors (authors) of industry-sponsored solid tumor clinical trials published between August 1, 2014, and December 31, 2015, in 6 high-impact journals (New England Journal of Medicine, Nature, Science, Lancet Oncology, Journal of Clinical Oncology, and Cancer Discovery) was assembled. Studies were limited to …


Anxiety-Related Issues In Cancer Survivorship, Maresi A. Berry-Stoelzle, Anna C. Mark, Peter Kim, Jeanette M. Daly Jan 2020

Anxiety-Related Issues In Cancer Survivorship, Maresi A. Berry-Stoelzle, Anna C. Mark, Peter Kim, Jeanette M. Daly

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Purpose: The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine patient opinions about anxiety in cancer survivorship, particularly the role of the primary care provider in management of anxiety related to the trajectory of long-term cancer survivorship.

Methods: Respondents to a mass email (N = 22,000) were invited to participate in 1 of 3 institutional review board-approved focus group meetings. Inclusion criteria were being an adult patient older than 25 years of age, having any type of cancer diagnosis, and being at least 18 months from treatment. The following specific issues were discussed: role of the primary care provider …


Factors Influencing Family Burden In Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Encounters, Hannah R. Abrams, Hayden S. Leeds, Heidi V. Russell, Melody B. Hellsten Oct 2019

Factors Influencing Family Burden In Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Encounters, Hannah R. Abrams, Hayden S. Leeds, Heidi V. Russell, Melody B. Hellsten

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Purpose: Caring for a child with cancer or hematologic disease places unique stress on a family unit. Families’ subjective experience of this care-related burden mediates the relationship between cost and health-related outcomes. While financial costs are well described for families of pediatric hematology/oncology patients, it is unclear how cost and other factors each contribute to families’ overall experience of care-related burden. This study identifies and groups the challenges that families report and describes their association with overall reported burden.

Methods: This mixed-methods analysis of a cross-sectional single-center study was conducted via structured, self-administered questionnaire provided to inpatient and outpatient caregivers …


Pharmacologic And Nonpharmacologic Approaches To Palliative Care In Oncology, Daniel Powell, Sunitha Johns, Samia Alam, Isabel E. Cwikla, Brendan Rasor, David W. Koh Oct 2019

Pharmacologic And Nonpharmacologic Approaches To Palliative Care In Oncology, Daniel Powell, Sunitha Johns, Samia Alam, Isabel E. Cwikla, Brendan Rasor, David W. Koh

Pharmacy and Wellness Review

In recent decades, few fields have changed as drastically as oncology. A wide variety of approaches must be taken in order to best care for cancer patients. With the globalization of health care and modern society, nontraditional management of cancer symptoms is once again increasing in popularity. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) has also recently updated their palliative care guidelines. These guidelines provide a detailed approach for the care of a wide range of cancer patients but largely focus on traditional pharmacotherapy. An increasing number of studies are being conducted on nonpharmacologic approaches to care for patients with cancer. …


Coordinating An Oncology Precision Medicine Clinic Within An Integrated Health System: Lessons Learned In Year One, Michael A. Thompson, Jennifer J. Godden, Deborah Wham, Antony Ruggeri, Michael P. Mullane, Amanda Wilson, Shamsuddin Virani, Scott M. Weissman, Brenda Ramczyk, Pamela Vanderwall, James L. Weese Jan 2019

Coordinating An Oncology Precision Medicine Clinic Within An Integrated Health System: Lessons Learned In Year One, Michael A. Thompson, Jennifer J. Godden, Deborah Wham, Antony Ruggeri, Michael P. Mullane, Amanda Wilson, Shamsuddin Virani, Scott M. Weissman, Brenda Ramczyk, Pamela Vanderwall, James L. Weese

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Precision medicine is a term describing strategies to promote health and prevent and treat disease based on an individual’s genetic, molecular, and lifestyle characteristics. Oncology precision medicine (OPM) is a cancer treatment approach targeting cancer-specific genetic and molecular alterations. Implementation of an OPM clinical program optimally involves the support and collaboration of multiple departments, including administration, medical oncology, pathology, interventional radiology, genetics, research, and informatics. In this review, we briefly introduce the published evidence regarding OPM’s potential effect on patient outcomes and discuss what we have learned over the first year of operating an OPM program within an integrated health …


Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2018 Oct 2018

Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2018

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

This journal supplement includes selected abstracts from among the more than 50 presented at the 44th annual Aurora Scientific Day research symposium. Held May 25, 2018, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Aurora Scientific Day provides a forum for original research conducted by faculty, fellows, residents, and other allied health professionals affiliated with Aurora Health Care, an integrated health system with hospitals and clinics in Wisconsin and Illinois.


Racial Disparity Among Women Diagnosed With Invasive Breast Cancer In A Large Integrated Health System, Maharaj Singh, Santhi D. Konduri, George C. Bobustuc, Amin B. Kassam, Richard A. Rovin Jul 2018

Racial Disparity Among Women Diagnosed With Invasive Breast Cancer In A Large Integrated Health System, Maharaj Singh, Santhi D. Konduri, George C. Bobustuc, Amin B. Kassam, Richard A. Rovin

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-Hispanic white (NHW) women with invasive breast cancer are unclear, making it difficult to identify solutions. This study examined the effects of demographics, biomarkers, tumor characteristics, cancer stage, morphology, and treatment variables on overall and cancer-free survival in these patient populations.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed data for 6231 patients diagnosed with invasive breast cancer throughout an integrated health system from January 2006 through March 2015. Included for analysis were 5023 NHW and 413 AA women. All category and continuous variables in the study were described in the …


Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2017 Nov 2017

Conference Proceedings: Aurora Scientific Day 2017

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

This supplement includes select abstracts presented at the 43rd Annual Aurora Scientific Day research symposium on May 24, 2017. Aurora Scientific Day hosts a forum for original research conducted by faculty, fellows, residents, and other allied health professionals affiliated with Aurora Health Care, an integrated health system headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.


6-Year Experience Of Outpatient Total And Completion Thyroidectomy, Ethan Frank, Joshua Park Md, Alfred Simental, Christopher Vuong Md, Steve Lee Md, Phd, Pedro Andrade Filho Md, Daniel Kwon Md, Yuan Liu Md Mar 2017

6-Year Experience Of Outpatient Total And Completion Thyroidectomy, Ethan Frank, Joshua Park Md, Alfred Simental, Christopher Vuong Md, Steve Lee Md, Phd, Pedro Andrade Filho Md, Daniel Kwon Md, Yuan Liu Md

Loma Linda University Student Journal

Outpatient thyroidectomy has become slowly accepted with various published reports predominantly examining partial or subtotal thyroidectomy. Concerns regarding the safety of outpatient total and completion thyroidectomy remain, especially in regards to vocal fold paralysis, hypocalcemia, and catastrophic hematoma. We aimed to evaluate the safety of outpatient thyroid surgery in a large cohort. We conducted a retrospective review comparing outcomes in those who underwent outpatient (n=251) versus inpatient (n= 291) completion or total thyroidectomy between February 2009 and February 2015. Outpatient completion and total thyroidectomy had lower rates of temporary hypocalcemia (6% vs. 24.4%; p< 0.001) and no significant difference in rates of return to emergency department (1.2% vs. 1.4%), hematoma formation (0.8% vs. 0.7%), temporary (2% vs. 4.1%) or permanent (0.4% vs. 0.7%) vocal fold paralysis, or permanent hypocalcemia (0.4% vs. 0%) compared to the inpatient group. Outpatients requiring calcium replacement had shorter duration of postoperative calcium supplementation (44.4±59.3 days vs. 63.3 ±94.4 days; p < 0.001). Our data demonstrates similar safety in outpatient and inpatient total and completion thyroidectomy.


Case Report: Pthrp Related Hypercalcemia In Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma, Ankita Mehta, Md, Evan Caruso, Md Jul 2016

Case Report: Pthrp Related Hypercalcemia In Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma, Ankita Mehta, Md, Evan Caruso, Md

The Medicine Forum

INTRODUCTION

Hypercalcemia is commonly associated with solid tumor malignancies, but less often with hematologic malignancies. When present in hematologic malignancies, hypercalcemia is often secondary to overproduction of Vitamin D from the tumor cells. Very few cases with parathyroid hormone related peptide (PTHrP) induced hypercalcemia in B-cell lymphomas have been reported. Here we present a 44 year old male with a history of chronic lymphoctic leukemia who presented with hypercalcemia and an elevated PTHrP, found to have a transformation to Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL).


Anorectal Melanomas: Case Series, Jinyu Zhang, Md, Matthew Sochat, Md, Edward R. Feller, Md Jul 2016

Anorectal Melanomas: Case Series, Jinyu Zhang, Md, Matthew Sochat, Md, Edward R. Feller, Md

The Medicine Forum

INTRODUCTION

Melanoma is the most common tumor to metastasize to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. 60% of patients who die with malignant melanoma have GI involvement at autopsy1. Symptomatic disease presenting during life is unusual. Anorectal melanoma, a rare tumor that represents 1% of all melanomas and less than 4% of all anal malignancies, manifests with a range of non-specific symptoms and physical exam findings2. In fact, about one-third of lesions may be amelanotic3,4. Initial misdiagnosis as a benign lesion such as hemorrhoid is common.

We report 3 cases of anorectal melanoma presenting as primary GI complaints all without known cutaneous …


Case Report: Uncontrolled Anasarca: Capillary Leak Syndrome, Ankita Mehta, Md, Mansi Shah, Md Jul 2016

Case Report: Uncontrolled Anasarca: Capillary Leak Syndrome, Ankita Mehta, Md, Mansi Shah, Md

The Medicine Forum

INTRODUCTION

Capillary leak syndrome (CLS) is a rare clinical disease that causes edema, hypoproteinemia, episodic hypotension, dyspnea, hyponatremia, and weight gain that can be life threatening1. Although the underlying pathology is currently unknown, CLS is thought to be secondary to a systemic process associated with hyperpermeability of the body's microcirculation, resulting from a diffuse and severe disruption of the endothelium and causing generalized edema and often acute respiratory distress2.


Pharmacists On The Front Lines Of Polypharmacy: The Individualized Medication Assessment And Planning (Imap) Project To Improve Medication Use In Senior Adults With Cancer, Ginah Nightingale Pharmd, Bcop, Laura T. Pizzi Pharmd, Mph, Emily Hajjar Pharmd, Bcps, Bcacp, Cgp, Elizabeth Pigott, Margaret Wang, Shannon Doherty, Kristine Swartz Md, Andrew Chapman Do, Facp Nov 2015

Pharmacists On The Front Lines Of Polypharmacy: The Individualized Medication Assessment And Planning (Imap) Project To Improve Medication Use In Senior Adults With Cancer, Ginah Nightingale Pharmd, Bcop, Laura T. Pizzi Pharmd, Mph, Emily Hajjar Pharmd, Bcps, Bcacp, Cgp, Elizabeth Pigott, Margaret Wang, Shannon Doherty, Kristine Swartz Md, Andrew Chapman Do, Facp

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract provided.