A. Alvarez-Secord
Duke University
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Featured researches published by A. Alvarez-Secord.
Cancer | 2003
Ellen L. Jones; Thaddeus V. Samulski; Mark W. Dewhirst; A. Alvarez-Secord; Andrew Berchuck; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; Laura J. Havrilesky; John T. Soper; Leonard R. Prosnitz
Five randomized studies have demonstrated a benefit derived from adding cisplatin (CDDP)‐based chemotherapy to radiotherapy (RT) for treatment of cervical carcinoma. The Dutch Phase III pelvic tumor trial demonstrated a survival and local control benefit due to the addition of hyperthermia (HT) to RT. The authors evaluated response and toxicity in patients with locally advanced cervical carcinoma (LACC) who were treated with concurrent weekly CDDP, HT, and RT (whole pelvis [n = 7] and whole pelvis and paraaortic nodes [n = 5]).
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 2009
Nicole D. Fleming; A. Alvarez-Secord; Vivian E. von Gruenigen; Michael J. Miller; Amy P. Abernethy
The safety and efficacy of indwelling intraperitoneal (IP) catheters for the management of refractory malignant ascites is unclear. A systematic literature overview and retrospective chart review of patients with malignant refractory ascites who underwent indwelling IP catheter placement was performed. Standardized literature abstraction and chart review templates were used to ensure that consistent information was collected. Fifteen publications met literature search criteria, representing 221 patients. Tenckhoff (Quinton Instrument Company, Seattle, WA, USA), Pleurex (Denver Biomedical Inc., Golden, CO, USA), and peritoneal catheters were used, along with IP ports. A median 5.9% of cases (range: 2.5%-34%) had documented peritonitis. In the literature, untunneled catheters were most commonly associated with infections. Our chart review added 19 cases from two academic institutions to this literature (median age: 60 years [range: 31-85]; females: 17 [89%]; gynecological malignancies: 14 [73%]). Palliative management before catheter placement included diuretics (n=4 [21%]) and multiple paracenteses (n=11 [58%] had two or more taps [range: 2-8]). Median time from diagnosis to catheter placement was 25 months (range: 1-77). Interventions were: French pigtail catheters (n=16 [84%]), Tenckhoff catheter (n=1 [5%]), and Port-A-Caths (Smith Medical MD, St. Paul, MN, USA) (n=2; 11%). Four (21%) catheters were tunneled. Prophylactic antibiotics were prescribed in six cases (32%). Two cases (11%) had documented infections, seven catheters (37%) became occluded, and two leaked (11%). The median time from catheter until death was 36 days (range: 4-660). Nine patients (47%) were admitted to hospice. In these retrospective studies, indwelling IP catheters appear to be a safe and effective palliative strategy to manage refractory malignant ascites, without overwhelming infection rates.
Gynecologic Oncology | 2016
Peter G. Rose; J. Java; Mark A. Morgan; A. Alvarez-Secord; Joshua P. Kesterson; Frederick B. Stehman; David P. Warshal; William T. Creasman; Parviz Hanjani; Robert T. Morris; Larry J. Copeland
PURPOSE GOG 152 was a randomized trial of secondary cytoreductive surgery (SCS) in patients with suboptimal residual disease (residual tumor nodule >1cm in greatest diameter) following primary cytoreductive surgery for advanced stage ovarian cancer. The current analysis was undertaken to evaluate the impact of disease findings at SCS on progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). METHODS Among the 550 patients enrolled on GOG-152, two-hundred-sixteen patients were randomly assigned following 3cycles of cisplatin and paclitaxel to receive SCS. In 15 patients (7%) surgery was declined or contraindicated. In the remaining 201 patients the operative and pathology reports were utilized to classify their disease status at the beginning of SCS as; no gross disease/microscopically negative N=40 (19.9%), no gross disease/microscopically positive N=8 (4.0%), and gross disease N=153 (76.1%). RESULTS The median PFS for patients with no gross disease/microscopically negative was 16.1months, no gross disease/microscopically positive was 13.5months and for gross disease was 11.7months, P=0.002. The median OS for patients with no gross disease/microscopically negative was 51.5months, no gross disease/microscopically positive was 42.6months and for gross disease was 34.9months, P=0.018. CONCLUSION Although as previously reported SCS did not change PFS or OS, for those who underwent the procedure, their operative and pathologic findings were predictive of PFS and OS. Surgical/pathological residual disease is a biomarker of response to chemotherapy and predictive of PFS and OS.
International Journal of Gynecological Cancer | 2007
Warner K. Huh; J.M. Straughn; Andrea Mariani; Karl C. Podratz; Laura J. Havrilesky; A. Alvarez-Secord; Michael A. Gold; D.S. McMeekin; Susan C. Modesitt; A. L. Cooper; M.A. Powell; David G. Mutch; S. Nag; Ronald D. Alvarez; David E. Cohn
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2012
Gordana Vlahovic; Kellen L. Meadows; Hope E. Uronis; Michael A. Morse; Gerard C. Blobe; Richard F. Riedel; S. Yousuf Zafar; A. Alvarez-Secord; Jon P. Gockerman; Alexander Starodub; Neal Ready; Elizabeth Anderson; Johanna C. Bendell; Herbert Hurwitz
ASCO Meeting Abstracts | 2006
Jason D. Wright; A. Alvarez-Secord; T.M. Numnum; Rodney P. Rocconi; M.A. Powell; Andrew Berchuck; Ronald D. Alvarez; Kathryn Trinkaus; Janet S. Rader; David G. Mutch
Gynecologic Oncology | 2012
June M. Chan; J. Java; Bradley J. Monk; A. Alvarez-Secord; Daniel S. Kapp; Michael J. Birrer; Carol Aghajanian; Michael A. Bookman; Michael W. Kattan; Robert A. Burger
Gynecologic Oncology | 2013
E.M. Ko; W. Paige; Leslie H. Clark; Amanda L. Jackson; Jason Franasiak; Laura J. Havrilesky; A. Alvarez-Secord; Paola A. Gehrig; Victoria L. Bae-Jump
Gynecologic Oncology | 2013
William J. Lowery; Ashlei W. Lowery; J. Barnett; M. Lopez Acecevdo; Paula S. Lee; A. Alvarez-Secord; Laura J. Havrilesky
Gynecologic Oncology | 2013
E.M. Ko; Paige Walter; Leslie H. Clark; Laura J. Havrilesky; A. Alvarez-Secord; Paola A. Gehrig; Victoria L. Bae-Jump