The results show that our regimen has strong immunologic and antitumor activity in colorectal cancer patients and deserves to be investigated in phase III trials.
High-grade gliomas (HGG) have a poor outcome, however, prognostic subgroups of patients may be individuated by some clinico-biological parameters. It was recently demonstrated that the main response of HGG to therapy is autophagic death. Autophagy is involved in tumor suppression, and is defective in HGG, in which we previously found an underexpression of beclin 1 autophagic gene protein product. Underexpression of Beclin 1 protein has been correlated to poor patient outcome in other tumor types. In this paper, the prognostic role of Beclin 1 expression in HGG patients was investigated. We first evaluated the tumor cell cytoplasmic expression of Beclin 1 protein (BPCE), in a sample of 76 HGG by immunohistochemistry, and compared it with cell proliferation and apoptosis. We found high BPCE score positively correlated with apoptosis, and negatively with cell proliferation (p < 0.05). We then correlated BPCE score with survival and other prognostic parameters (histological grading, MGMT gene methylation status, age, patient performance status according to the Karnofski classification (KPS), extent of surgery, radiation therapy (RT) modality, temozolomide chemotherapy (TMZ CHT), and optimal/suboptimal post-surgical treatment). Forty-seven (61.8%) and twenty-nine (38.2%) patients showed high and low BPCE scores, respectively. BPCE showed statistically significant correlations with survival both at the univariate (p = 0.03) and multivariate analysis (p = 0.037). High BPCE was also positively correlated with high KPS values (p = 0.023), and with the accomplishment of an optimal postoperative therapy (p = 0.037). Furthermore, among patients showing a MGMT methylated gene, survival was significantly higher in cases with a higher BPCE score. BPCE score might be added to pathological evaluation of HGG for prognostic purposes.
This randomized study compared the efficacy of epirubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy on the disease-free interval (DFI) and overall survival of patients with high-risk soft-tissue sarcomas. After curative surgery, 43 of the 88 enrolled patients were assigned to surgery with or without radiotherapy and 45 to surgery plus chemotherapy (26 epirubicin, 19 epirubicin + ifosfamide) with or without radiotherapy. The trial closed prematurely because of poor patient accrual. There was a statistical significant difference in the 5-year disease-free survival of the patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy (69%) and that of those treated with surgery with or without radiotherapy (44%) ( p= 0.01). The 5-year survival of the patients treated with adjuvant chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy was 72% as against 47% of those treated with surgery with or without radiotherapy ( p= 0.06). The power of the study was 0.65 for both the DFI and overall survival. The results of the study suggest a possible advantage of epirubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with soft-tissue sarcoma at high risk of relapse.
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