scholarly journals Multimodality Treatment in Metastatic Gastric Cancer: Working Together to Tailor the Continuum of Care

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 5492
Author(s):  
Angelica Petrillo

Gastric cancer (GC) represents one of the most frequent and lethal tumors worldwide today, finding itself in fifth place in terms of incidence and third in terms of mortality [...]

ESMO Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 100234
Author(s):  
K. Shimozaki ◽  
I. Nakayama ◽  
D. Takahari ◽  
D. Kamiimabeppu ◽  
H. Osumi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 952-963
Author(s):  
Tuyen Hoang ◽  
Farshid Dayyani ◽  
Ariceli Alfaro ◽  
Jasmine Huynh ◽  
Jingran Ji ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Parisi ◽  
Giampiero Porzio ◽  
Corrado Ficorella

Gastric cancer (GC) still remains an incurable disease in almost two-thirds of the cases. However, a deeper knowledge of its biology in the last few years has revealed potential biomarkers suitable for tailored treatment with targeted agents. This aspect, together with the improvement in early supportive care and a wiser use of the available cytotoxic drugs across multiple lines of treatment, has resulted in incremental and progressive survival benefits. Furthermore, slowly but surely, targeted therapies and immune checkpoint inhibitors are revising the therapeutic scenario even in metastatic GC and especially in particular subgroups. Moreover, important study results regarding the possible role of an integrated approach combining systemic, surgical, and locoregional treatment in carefully selected oligometastatic GC patients are awaited. This review summarizes the state-of-the-art and the major ongoing trials involving a multimodal treatment of metastatic GC.


Author(s):  
Maitane GARCÍA-LÓPEZ ◽  
Ester VAL ◽  
Ion IRIARTE ◽  
Raquel OLARTE

Taking patient experience as a basis, this paper introduces a theoretical framework, to capture insights leading to new technological healthcare solutions. Targeting a recently diagnosed type 1 diabetes child and her mother (the principal caregiver), the framework showed its potential with effective identification of meaningful insights in a generative session. The framework is based on the patient experience across the continuum of care. It identifies insights from the patient perspective: capturing patients´ emotional and cognitive responses, understanding agents involved in patient experience, uncovering pain moments, identifying their root causes, and/or prioritizing actions for improvement. The framework deepens understanding of the patient experience by providing an integrated and multi-leveled structure to assist designers to (a) empathise with the patient and the caregiver throughout the continuum of care, (b) understand the interdependencies around the patient and different agents and (c) reveal insights at the interaction level.


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