PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Palliation is rarely a topic in studies on advanced cancer

RCTs only rarely consider end-of-life aspects/ Superior patient-relevant treatment goals are often lacking

2014-04-24
(Press-News.org) End-of-life aspects, the corresponding terminology, and the relevance of palliation in advanced cancer are often not considered in publications on randomized controlled trials (RCTs). This is the result of an analysis by the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG), which has now been published as final report.

Together with external experts, IQWiG analysed studies on four solid tumours as examples: glioblastoma, lung cancer, malignant melanoma, and pancreatic cancer. For this purpose, the research team evaluated publications on RCTs investigating the use of disease-modifying treatments such as chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Studies on purely symptomatic interventions (e.g. colostomies) were not included.

Only 40% of studies name superior treatment goals

The research team included a total of 100 study publications; 25 for each of the four indications. Even though the median survival time for these four types of tumours is usually 24 months at most, in the introductory description of the study setting, only 71% of the publications provided clear information on the advanced phase of disease.

A superior patient-relevant treatment goal was only named in about 40% of the publications. This does not refer to the study outcomes, but to what was clinically intended with the respective intervention and what patients could hope for. Most cases (30 out of 38) referred solely to an increase in life expectancy; two referred solely to quality of life or symptom control.

PROs are clearly underrepresented

Accordingly, the primary outcome recorded in the studies was almost exclusively overall survival or a surrogate parameter such as progression-free survival or tumour response.

Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), which also include quality of life, were not investigated as the primary outcome in any study. They were merely named as secondary or tertiary study outcomes, and only in 36, that is about a third, of the publications. In 31 cases results for PROs were reported in the primary publication. In the remaining five, these findings were presumably provided only in later publications, and thus generally in less prominent journals.

Weighing of benefit and harms not always comprehensible

In most publications authors addressed the benefit-harm ratio of the respective interventions. But the importance of side effects for patients was appropriately reflected and presented only in 22 out of 88 of these publications, and instead played down by certain formulations in 53. All authors drew a corresponding conclusion, but this was comprehensible on the basis of the study results reported beforehand for only 48 of the publications.

Terms are used differently

The report also aimed to clarify terms within the context of "curation" and "palliation". However, this was not possible as these were used inconsistently in the publications analysed and rarely defined.

For instance, the meaning of "salvage therapy" is unclear. "To salvage" means "to rescue", which could lead patients to assume that the treatment they are undergoing will "rescue", that is "cure" them. However, precisely this case is no longer realistic in the specific treatment situation.

Specific treatment situation not adequately represented

Stefan Lange, Deputy Head of IQWiG and one of the authors of the report, sums up: "Our investigation showed that the specific treatment situation of patients in whom the end of life is foreseeable is inadequately represented in publications.

And this deficit is serious, as physicians also refer to the results of clinical studies in their conversations with patients. Both can only conjointly make good decisions about treatment options if they receive complete and unbiased information on the expected benefit and harm.

This is particularly important in diseases that are expected to lead to death in the foreseeable future, especially as therapy usually places a burden on patients. Many of those involved, physicians, researchers and also industry representatives, repeatedly emphasize that quality of life is of paramount importance for this patient group. It is thus all the more incomprehensible that this aspect is still clearly neglected in studies."

Process of report production

The present final report was generated in collaboration with external experts within the framework of the general commission. To promote the Institute's scientific independence, the Federal Joint Committee (G-BA) awarded a general commission to IQWIG in December 2004 and extended it in 2006 to cover information on the quality and efficiency in the health care system. This allows IQWiG to independently select and work on topics. In contrast to other types of reports, no commenting procedure is held for these reports.

The executive summary provides an overview of the background, methods and further results of the report.

INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Children living with a lone parent are as happy as those with 2

2014-04-24
Children living with a step-parent or a lone parent are as happy as those living with two biological parents, the British Sociological Association's annual conference in Leeds heard today [Thursday 24 April]. In a major UK study on wellbeing, researchers from NatCen Social Research analysed data from the Millennium Cohort Study on 12,877 children aged seven in 2008 and found no significant difference in happiness. Whether the children lived with two biological parents, a step-parent and biological parent, or in a single parent family, made no difference to how they ...

Finnish team of researchers finds a mutation in a tumor of the jaw

2014-04-24
A Finnish team of researchers was the first in the world to discover a gene mutation in ameloblastoma, which is a tumour of the jaw. Ameloblastoma is an odontogenic tumour with a high tendency to recur after treatment. Ameloblastoma is most often found in the posterior of the lower jaw. Ameoloblastomas are treated by surgery, often resulting in tissue deficiencies in the jaws as well as loss of several teeth. A suitable drug therapy could reduce the need for surgery and the recurrence of ameloblastoma, but finding such a treatment requires a better understanding of the ...

Viral infections: Identifying the tell-tale patterns

2014-04-24
Researchers at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich have identified the structural features that enable the innate immune system to discriminate between viral and endogenous RNAs in living cells. When viruses infect cells, they take control of cellular metabolism and hijack cellular resources for the production of viral proteins. This process is dependent on viral RNA molecules that are delivered directly to (in the case of RNA viruses) and/or newly synthesized in the host cell, and provide the blueprints for the fabrication of viral proteins by the cell's ...

How productive are the ore factories in the deep sea?

2014-04-24
About ten years after the first moon landing, scientists on earth made a discovery that proved that our home planet still holds a lot of surprises in store for us. Looking through the portholes of the submersible ALVIN near the bottom of the Pacific Ocean in 1979, American scientists saw for the first time chimneys, several meters tall, from which black water at about 300 degrees and saturated with minerals shot out. What we have found out since then: These "black smokers", also called hydrothermal vents, exist in all oceans. They occur along the boundaries of tectonic ...

HHS leaders call for expanded use of medications to combat opioid overdose epidemic

HHS leaders call for expanded use of medications to combat opioid overdose epidemic
2014-04-24
A national response to the epidemic of prescription opioid overdose deaths was outlined yesterday in the New England Journal of Medicine by leaders of agencies in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The commentary calls upon health care providers to expand their use of medications to treat opioid addiction and reduce overdose deaths, and describes a number of misperceptions that have limited access to these potentially life-saving medications. The commentary also discusses how medications can be used in combination with behavior therapies to help drug users ...

Treatment for deadly yeast disease reduced to 3 days

2014-04-24
Initial treatment for a brain infection caused by fungus could now be treated in three days, rather than two weeks, due to study by University of Liverpool scientists. Cryptococcus – a form of yeast - infections are often fatal but are relatively neglected in medical research. They are found in many parts of the world, including Africa, Australasia and South East Asia and mainly affect people with weakened immune systems. This infection kills up to 700,000 people a year. The University research team has tested the effects of the most commonly used drug on Cryptococcus ...

Animals with bigger brains, broader diets have better self control

Animals with bigger brains, broader diets have better self control
2014-04-24
DURHAM, N.C. -- A new study representing the largest study of animal intelligence to-date finds that animals with bigger brains and broader diets have better self-control. Published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the study is part of a long history of research aimed at understanding the animal mind. Specifically, why are some species able to do things like make and use tools, read social cues, or even understand basic math, and others aren't? Until now, most studies of animal intelligence have focused on only one or a few ...

New ultrasound device may add in detecting risk for heart attack, stroke

New ultrasound device may add in detecting risk for heart attack, stroke
2014-04-24
Researchers from North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have developed a new ultrasound device that could help identify arterial plaque that is at high risk of breaking off and causing heart attack or stroke. At issue is the plaque that builds up in arteries as we age. Some types of plaque are deemed "vulnerable," meaning that they are more likely to detach from the artery wall and cause heart attack or stroke. "Existing state-of-the-art technologies are capable of determining if plaque is present in the arteries, but can't ...

New study links inflammation in those with PTSD to changes in microRNA

2014-04-24
With a new generation of military veterans returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has become a prominent concern in American medical institutions and the culture at-large. Estimates indicate that as many as 35 percent of personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from PTSD. New research from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine is shedding light on how PTSD is linked to other diseases in fundamental and surprising ways. The rise in PTSD has implications beyond the impact of the psychiatric disorder and its ...

Your T-shirt's ringing: Telecommunications in the spaser age

Your T-shirts ringing: Telecommunications in the spaser age
2014-04-24
A new version of "spaser" technology being investigated could mean that mobile phones become so small, efficient, and flexible they could be printed on clothing. A team of researchers from Monash University's Department of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering (ECSE) has modelled the world's first spaser (surface plasmon amplification by stimulated emission of radiation) to be made completely of carbon. A spaser is effectively a nanoscale laser or nanolaser. It emits a beam of light through the vibration of free electrons, rather than the space-consuming electromagnetic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Towards hand gesture recognition using a channel-wise cumulative spike train image-driven model

Parasitic infection and treatment linked to cancer-related gene activity in the cervix

Over 3 million children died from AMR-related infections in 2022, major study shows

Study estimates proportion of adolescents living with overweight and obesity in England has increased by 50% between 2008 and 2023

Welcome to the First International Conference on Cyborg and Bionic Systems

Breakthrough study identifies promising biomarker for early sepsis detection in neonates, children, and pregnant women

3-year study of tirzepatide shows that most patients only gain 5% or less from their lowest or ‘nadir’ weight

Tirzepatide can produce clinically meaningful weight loss for at least 3 years in adults with overweight or obesity who don’t have diabetes

Common respiratory condition nearly triples the risk of death in adults, new study finds

New research shows evidence of children’s gender biases reflected in their facial emotional expressions

Crustal brines at an oceanic transform fault

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: April 11, 2025

A fluid battery that can take any shape

Light that spirals like a nautilus shell

Transforming doors into gateways to the virtual world: the future of mixed reality!

AACR announces recipients of the 2025 AACR June L. Biedler Prize for Cancer Journalism

Human-AI relationships pose ethical issues, psychologists say

Abortion rates remain relatively stable in Canada, while rates spike in UK, Europe, and US

Hundred-year storm tides will occur every few decades in Bangladesh, scientists report

Kidney function following COVID-19 in children and adolescents

Risk factors for severe disease among children hospitalized with RSV

Watch a live catalytic event in real time

Top medical research expert Mark T. Esser named inaugural head of UVA’s Manning Institute

Protein GSK3β offers new angle on overcoming melanoma drug resistance

Mimickers and associated neoplasms of Castleman disease

Preserving and using the deep sea: scientists call for more knowledge to enable sustainable management

Breaking the cycle: unveiling how childhood trauma fuels parenting and abuse

A new era in materials science: antiferromagnetic quasicrystals unveiled

From boring to bursting: a giant black hole awakens

Illuminating the twist: light-driven inversion of supramolecular chirality

[Press-News.org] Palliation is rarely a topic in studies on advanced cancer
RCTs only rarely consider end-of-life aspects/ Superior patient-relevant treatment goals are often lacking