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Dive into the research topics where Benny Zee is active.

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Featured researches published by Benny Zee.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 1997

Effect of postchemotherapy nausea and vomiting on health-related quality of life

David Osoba; Benny Zee; David Warr; J. Latreille; Leonard Kaizer; Joseph L. Pater

Abstractu2002The purpose was to measure the effects of postchemotherapy nausea and vomiting (PCNV) on health-related quality of life (HQL) in patients receiving either moderately or highly emetogenic chemotherapy. The study sample consisted of 832 chemotherapy-naive patients with cancer who received either moderately or highly emetogenic chemotherapy as part of multicenter trials of new antiemetics. The patients completed the self-report European Organization for Research and Cancer (EORTC) core Quality of Life Questionnaire (QLQ-C30) before chemotherapy (baseline) and 1 week (day 8) and 2–4 weeks after chemotherapy. They also completed a self-report nausea and vomiting (NV) diary for 5–7 days after chemotherapy. To determine the effects of PCNV on HQL, the change in scores between the baseline and day 8 HQL assessments was calculated for each domain and symptom in the QLQ-C30 and compared in four subgroups of patients: those with both nausea and vomiting, those with nausea but no vomiting, those with no nausea but with vomiting, and those with neither nausea nor vomiting. The group with both nausea and vomiting showed statistically significantly worse physical, cognitive and social functioning, global quality of life, fatigue, anorexia, insomnia and dyspnea as compared to the group with neither nausea nor vomiting (0.0001<P<0.05). Patients with only nausea but no vomiting tended to have less worsening in functioning and symptoms than those having both nausea and vomiting. Increased severity of vomiting (>2 episodes) was associated with worsening of only global quality of life and anorexia as compared with 1–2 episodes of vomiting (0.0001<P<0.01). By 2–4 weeks after chemotherapy all HQL scores had either returned to their baseline levels or were better than baseline. PCNV adversely affects several quality-of-life domains, but patients with only nausea experience less disruption than do those with both nausea and vomiting. Patients with 1–2 episodes of vomiting experience almost the same degree of disruption of HQL as do patients with more than 2 episodes of vomiting.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 1997

Fatigue in patients with cancer: results with National Cancer Institute of Canada Clinical Trials Group studies employing the EORTC QLQ-C30.

Joseph L. Pater; Benny Zee; Michael J. Palmer; Dianne Johnston; David Osoba

Abstractu2002The purpose of this study was to examine the factors which affect the level of fatigue among patients participating in clinical trials in which this symptom had been assessed with the EORTC QLQ-C30. Data were assembled from 2390 patients in ten clinical trials in which the QLQ-C30 had been used to assess baseline and on-study quality of life. The relationship between the level of fatigue reported by the patients on the fatigue scale of this questionnaire and patient and disease characteristics was assessed in univariate and multivariate cross-sectional analyses. In addition, changes in fatigue scores were compared in a longitudinal analysis among patients on two arms of an anti-emetic trial whose emesis control was markedly different. Baseline fatigue levels differed substantially among patients taking part in the different trials. Factors associated with greater fatigue severity on univariate analysis included: female gender, presence of metastatic disease, and poorer performance status. In addition, on multivariate analyses the oldest patients were found to have less fatigue, as were patients with breast cancer, while patients with ovarian and lung cancer experienced greater fatigue. Patients on the arm of the anti-emetic trial in which emesis was better controlled showed significantly less increase in fatigue after receiving chemotherapy. The fatigue scale of the QLQ-C30 appears to provide a useful approach to assessing this important symptom. The relationships found between fatigue and patient and disease characteristics need further exploration as does the degree to which the QLQ-C30 fully captures this dimension of quality of life.


Cancer | 1996

Thermography: Its relation to pathologic characteristics, vascularity, proliferation rate, and survival of patients with invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast

Ernest E. Sterns; Benny Zee; Sandip SenGupta; Fraser W. Saunders

The reason for the thermal abnormality associated with some breast cancers is unclear. We previously reported that a thermographic abnormality is associated with tumor size and lymph node involvement. Despite this association, we were unable to demonstrate an independent association between an abnormal thermogram and survival.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2000

Mammographic density changes in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women: is effect of hormone replacement therapy predictable?

Ernest E. Sterns; Benny Zee

AbstractBackgroundMammographic density adversely affects diagnostic accuracy and may be a risk factor for breast cancer. Mammographic density is affected by hormone replacement therapy (HRT).nObjectiveTo assess mammographic density in postmenopausal women with and without HRT.nMethodPart I. Mammographic density was determined in 1232 postmenopausal women attending a breast screening clinic. Density was compared between HRT users and nonusers in three age groups. When available, previous mammograms were assessed for interval density change. Part II. Density change in 162 women during transition from premenopause to postmenopause was recorded. HRT effect was assessed.nResultsPart I. There was no density difference between postmenopausal HRT-users and nonusers younger than age 55. Thereafter, the density was significantly less in nonusers. In the majority of HRT-users the density remained at pretreatment levels but density increased in 8% of women after HRT was started. Part II. Of 117 HRT nonusers followed over menopause 38% had a density decrease before age 55. Of those started on HRT, 80% had no density change, 18% decreased density and 2% increased density.nConclusionsThe density decreases significantly after age 55 with the greatest change occurring between age 55 and 64. This decrease does not occur in the majority of HRT-users. Usually HRT maintains the density present at the time HRT is started. Density decreases after HRT is started in some women suggesting refractoriness to hormones. In fewer than 8% of women density increases commensurate with HRT. Any adverse effect of HRT may depend on the receptivity of the epithelial elements which, in turn, may be reflected by the mammographic density at the time HRT is started.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 1994

Inconsistency of prognostic factors for post-chemotherapy nausea and vomiting

Joseph L. Pater; L. Slamet; Benny Zee; David Osoba; David Warr; James J. Rusthoven

A number of prognostic factors have been reported to influence the probability of developing nausea and vomiting after cytotoxic chemotherapy. This study used data collected in four randomized anti-emetic trials conducted by the Clinical Trials Group of the National Cancer Institute of Canada (NCIC-CTG) to assess the consistency of the effects of these prognostic factors. A total of 582 patients, all of whom had received moderately emetogenic chemotherapy for the first time, but who were assigned to different anti-emetics, were included in the analysis. The major findings was that the probability of post-chemotherapy nausea and vomiting was much more strongly influenced by the type of chemotherapy given and the type of anti-emetic used than by patient (e.g., age, gender) or environmental (e.g., treatment location, time of administration) characteristics. Further, patient-related factors had different, and sometimes opposite, effects in different anti-emetic and chemotherapy subgroups. Finally, the relative potency of anti-emetics appeared to vary with chemotherapy regimens. Implications of these findings for future studies are discussed.


Cancer | 1991

Thermography as a predictor of prognosis in cancer of the breast

Ernest E. Sterns; Benny Zee

Although thermography is generally considered to lack sufficient sensitivity to be a useful in diagnosis of cancer of the breast, the association of a thermal abnormality with some breast cancers cannot be discounted. Breast cancers demonstrating such a thermographic abnormality have been reported to be associated with decreased survival when compared with patients with no such change. In a study of 214 patients confirmed to have breast cancer without distant metastases, 121 were found to have a thermographic abnormality. Patients whose tumors were thermographically abnormal had significantly larger primary lesions and a higher proportion of metastatic axillary lymph nodes. However, both the 5‐year survival and the 5‐year disease‐free survival were not significantly different from patients who had no thermographic abnormality.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1997

Macromolecular interstitial clearance, tumour vascularity, other prognostic factors and breast cancer survival

Ernest E. Sterns; Sandip K. SenGupta; Benny Zee

Background: Clearance of large molecules from the interstitialspace is an important function of lymphatics andis affected by local pathologic changes.Objective: To determine if the clearance rate ofinterstitially injected albumin is correlated to tumour characteristicsand outcome in women with invasive breast cancer.Method: In a consecutive series of women comingto biopsy for suspected breast cancer, technetium-tagged albuminwas injected into the tissue adjacent to thepalpable mass. The isotope disappearance rate was measuredover two hours. Also assessed were the maximumvessel density (MVD – using Factor VIII polyclonalantisera), the proliferation rate (using Ki-67 antisera), nodestatus, tumour size, histologic and nuclear grade, mitoticrate, and p53 and c-erbB-2 oncoproteins. All patientswere followed until relapse and for a minimumof 10 years.Results: In multivariate analysis, an association between relapse-freesurvival and isotope clearance rate was suggested (p= 0.024). The best outcome was seen inpatients with the least isotope clearance. Node status,size, histologic and nuclear grade, and mitotic ratecorrelated with survival. MVD did not correlate withsurvival and was inversely related to the isotopeclearance rate. Tumour proliferation rate, and the c-erbB-2and p53 oncoproteins did not relate to outcome.Conclusion: The role of lymphatics in breast canceris difficult to study. Measurement of interstitial clearancemay be a useful technique and could bea prognostic factor.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1992

Prognostic significance of the immunohistochemical reaction to human milk fat globule antibodies in node-negative and node-positive breast cancer

Ernest E. Sterns; William A. Fletcher; Benny Zee

The status of axillary lymph nodes in patients with breast cancer is important prognostically but does not identify all patients who will have long or short survival. To determine if the immunohistochemical reaction of tumor cells to human milk fat globule (HMFG) antibodies will define prognosis more specifically, we examined patients with node-negative disease and patients with more than three positive nodes, the extremes of the prognostic spectrum. In both node-negative and node-positive groups, patients who relapsed were matched by age at diagnosis, tumor size, histologic type, and receptor status, with patients who remained disease-free for a minimum of 48 months. Patients with poor survival had a higher proportion of poorly differentiated cancers. The ability to generate antigens recognized by HMFG antibodies was decreased in patients with recurrent disease, but this was significant only in patients with node-positive tumors. Tumors of patients who remained disease-free were more likely to have a pattern of membrane staining, while cytoplasmic staining was more frequent in those who relapsed. The results suggest that immunohistologic response to HMFG antibodies may assist in identifying cancers with poor prognosis, supplementing the prediction derived from node status.


Annals of Surgery | 1992

Immunohistochemical characteristics of human milk-fat globule antibodies in predicting chest wall and distant metastasis after mastectomy for localized cancer of the breast.

Ernest E. Sterns; W. Allen Fletcher; Benny Zee

Because postoperative radiation reduces chest wall metastasis after mastectomy, it is important to identify patients in whom it might develop. Pathologic and immunohistochemical features in 59 patients with chest wall metastasis were compared with characteristics in disease-free patients and patients with systemic metastases without chest wall metastasis. Immunohistochemical studies with human milk-fat globule (HMFG)-2 were not predictive, but a membrane reaction with HMFG-1 was associated with fewer systemic metastases and tumors, in which most of the cells reacted with the antibody had significantly decreased likelihood of chest wall metastasis. Antigenic concordance between the primary breast cancer and the chest wall metastasis was demonstrated. Neither tumor size nor axillary node metastasis predicted development of chest wall metastasis, but systemic metastases were less common when fewer than four nodes were involved, the primary tumor was well differentiated, and estrogen receptors were positive.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2000

Randomized Intergroup Trial of Cisplatin–Paclitaxel Versus Cisplatin–Cyclophosphamide in Women With Advanced Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: Three-Year Results

Martine Piccart; Kamma Bertelsen; Keith James; Jim Cassidy; C Mangioni; Ernst Simonsen; Gavin Stuart; Stan B. Kaye; Ignace Vergote; René Blom; R. Grimshaw; Ronald J. Atkinson; K Swenerton; Claes G. Tropé; M. Nardi; Janne Kærn; S Tumolo; Petra Timmers; Josée-Anne Roy; François Lhoas; Berit Lindvall; Monica Bacon; Angelo Birt; Joern Erik Andersen; Benny Zee; James Paul; Benoît Baron; Sergio Pecorelli

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David Osoba

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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David Warr

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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