Fatigue is frequent among oncologic patients. Unpurified Paullinia cupana dry extract showed encouraging results for chemotherapy-induced fatigue in our previous studies. We report two randomized, double-blind studies with a standardized dry purified Paullinia cupana extract named PC-18. For both studies, we recruited early breast cancer patients who had an increase in their fatigue scores after their first cycle of adjuvant chemotherapy. In the first study, we compared an oral dose of 37.5 mg of PC-18 twice daily with placebo. In the second study, we examined PC-18 at either 7.5 or 12.5 mg orally twice daily versus placebo. In both studies, PC-18 was not superior to placebo as assessed by both Chalder and Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) fatigue questionnaires, probably reflecting unexpectedly good placebo antifatigue activity. Since all capsules employed in both studies contained about 100 mg of magnesium silicate as an excipient, we retrospectively evaluated frozen serum samples from the second study and found a significant increase in magnesium levels after patients received placebo. By multivariate analysis, higher prerandomization magnesium levels and higher BFI scores together with the use of a 12.5 mg dose of PC-18 all correlated significantly with higher posttreatment BFI scores. We observed no significant toxicities in any of the trials. We conclude that the absence of differences between PC-18 and placebo may be due to the unexpectedly high antifatigue activity of the placebo in these studies. Further studies evaluating the role of magnesium supplementation for chemotherapy-induced fatigue are needed.
SUMMARY INTRODUCTION Structural disparities between different Brazilian regions in public health system cause patients to migrate in search of better conditions to treat their diseases. Besides patient’s discomfort, there is a concentration of care in large centres, causing overload to current capacity. OBJECTIVE To evaluate migratory flow and associated factors in a reference service in oncology. METHODS Cross-sectional study conducted at a referral oncology service in Great ABC region of São Paulo. Patients were interviewed, and clinical and demographic data collected. RESULTS Between March-July 2016, 217 patients were included. Analysis showed a divergence between the postal code registered in the medical record and that recorded during the interview in approximately 10% of cases. Of these, 42.9% were residents of other states. Search for treatment motivated most patients to seek service outside their city. CONCLUSION Results reflect the informal search for medical care outside the home area. Besides the direct impact on patients’ quality of life, migratory flow has an economic-social impact because these patients place a burden and impose costs on services of cities where they do not perform their responsibilities as citizens. Confirmation of the existence of a significant migratory flow demonstrates the need to discuss restructuring public health policies.
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