Reseña educativa
Guía para la dosificación y el monitoreo de psicotrópicos para niños y adolescentes
Dr. Glenn S. Hirsch, Dr. Keith Ditkowsky
This handbook is meant to provide quick, bed- side, basic information about currently approved anticancer and chemoprotectant agents. Drug indications approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are included to provide a framework for deciding use of that agent. However, anticancer agents are often used outside of FDA labeling and sometimes used based on minimal clinical data. In this situation, the dosage guidelines will provide an estimate for a safe dose to use in a particular patient, especially with regard to the total to be administered per cycle or treatment course. To prevent errors though, the original refer- ence source for use of that agent or combination should always be consulted first.
A number of unanswered or evolving issues remain in lung cancer. These issues include: revisiting the issue of screening and early detection using spiral computed tomography (CT); the evaluation of new, non-toxic agents for chemoprevention in those at risk and in those with pathologic stage I disease; the role of molecular genetics and other biologic markers in fingerprinting tumors, predicting prognosis and tailoring therapy; the ultimate role of newer agent(s) as part of neoadjuvant therapy in less advanced (stage II and III) disease; the role of newer agents that alter the tumor milieu/microenvironment (eg, angiogenesis or metallo- proteinase inhibitors, etc.) in delaying progression in late disease and preventing relapse in earlier disease; the proper sequencing of radiation and chemotherapy in stage III disease (eg, the ultimate role of sequential neoadjuvant and concurrent chemoradiation); the roles of biologics, non-chemotherapeutic radiosensitizers and normal tissue protectants in stage III NSCLC; the opti- mal dose, volume, fractionation and schedule of radia- tion therapy (RT), and the role of 3-D conformal RT; and the necessity of surgery after chemoradiation for stage III disease.
Despite the rising breast cancer incidence in the United States (US), the death rate from it has been decreasing over the past decade. While some of the decrease in mortality can be attributed to a broader use of screening mammography, a significant portion of this is also due to the increased use of systemic therapies in the adjuvant setting. Identification of effective new agents for the treatment of metastatic disease has also resulted in prolonged survival and improved quality of life.