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Dive into the research topics where Lorna Weir is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorna Weir.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Chronic Arm Morbidity After Curative Breast Cancer Treatment: Prevalence and Impact on Quality of Life

Winkle Kwan; Jeremy Jackson; Lorna Weir; Carol Dingee; Greg McGregor; Ivo A. Olivotto

PURPOSE To determine the prevalence of and contributing factors for chronic arm morbidity including lymphedema in breast cancer patients after treatment and to assess the impact of arm morbidity on quality of life (QOL). PATIENTS AND METHODS A four-question screening questionnaire was developed and mailed to a random sample of 744 breast cancer patients treated curatively in two cancer centers from 1993 to 1997. Patients were without recurrence and at least 2 years from diagnosis. Respondents were classified as with or without arm-related symptoms on the basis of the survey. Stratified random samples from each group were then invited for a detailed assessment of their symptoms and signs, including the presence of lymphedema. Their QOL was assessed by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QOL Questionnaire C-30 and by a detailed arm problem questionnaire that assessed various aspects of daily arm functioning. RESULTS Approximately half of all screened patients were symptomatic and 12.5% of all assessed patients had lymphedema. Axillary dissection (AD) and axillary radiotherapy (RT) after dissection were statistically significantly related to the occurrence of arm symptoms (odds ratio for AD = 3.3, P <.001; odds ratio for RT = 3.1, P <.001). Symptomatic patients and patients with lymphedema both had impaired QOL compared with asymptomatic patients. CONCLUSION Treatment for breast cancer is associated with considerable arm morbidity, which has a negative impact on QOL. Arm morbidity should be carefully monitored in future studies involving local treatment modalities for breast cancer.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 1997

A randomised trial of accelerated versus conventional radiotherapy in head and neck cancer.

Stewart M. Jackson; Lorna Weir; J. Hay; Victor H.Y. Tsang; J. Scott Durham

Abstract Background and purpose : To study the effect of accelerated radiation treatment in locally advanced head and neck cancer, a prospective randomised trial was conducted comparing two fractionation schemes which differed only in the overall treatment time; fraction size and total dose were the same in both arms. Materials and methods : Eighty-two patients with stage 3 or 4 squamous cell cancer of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx or larynx considered suitable for radical radiotherapy as primary treatment were stratified by site and stage and randomised to receive 66 Gy in 33 2 Gy daily fractions in 45–48 days (o.d.) or 66 Gy in 33 2 Gy twice daily fractions in 22–25 days (b.i.d.). Results : An initial improved clinical response in tumour control in the b.i.d. arm was not sustained and the 3 year recurrence free survival and overall survival rates were similar and not significantly different. The actuarial recurrence free survival was 49.1% in the b.i.d. arm and 44.3% in the o.d. arm. The disease free 3 year survival was 59.4% and 56.8%, respectively. The acute and late normal tissue effects were scored using the RTOG scale. As expected the acute effects were much greater in the b.i.d. arm. The combined grade 3 and 4 late effects were similar but the proportion of grade 4 reactions was significantly higher in the b.i.d. arm. The increase in grade 4 toxicity caused the trial to be discontinued after 82 of the planned 226 patients had been randomised. Conclusions : The severity of the normal tissue effects and a failure to demonstrate sustained local control does not support this fractionation scheme in patients with such extensive head and neck cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Prognostic Significance of the Number of Axillary Lymph Nodes Removed in Patients With Node-Negative Breast Cancer

Lorna Weir; Caroline Speers; D'yachkova Y; Ivo A. Olivotto

PURPOSE The objective of the study was to evaluate the association between the number of lymph nodes removed at axillary dissection and recurrence and survival for patients with node-negative invasive breast cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS Subjects were 2,278 women with pathologically node-negative invasive breast cancer, diagnosed from 1989 to 1993 in British Columbia, Canada. Women aged > or = 90 years, with pure in-situ, bilateral invasive breast cancer or T4, N1, N2, or M1 stage, or who had axillary radiation were excluded. Two groups were defined for analysis: node-negative with no systemic therapy (n = 1,468) and node-negative with systemic therapy (n = 810). Median follow-up was 7.5 years. Prognostic variables assessed were age at diagnosis, tumor size, tumor grade, invasion of lymphatics, veins, or nerves, estrogen receptor status, and number of nodes removed. RESULTS For patients not receiving systemic therapy, regional relapse was significantly increased with smaller numbers of nodes removed (P =.03). There was a trend toward shorter overall survival with fewer nodes removed (P =.06). Node-negative patients who received systemic therapy did not have a higher regional relapse rate or shorter overall survival when fewer nodes were recovered. CONCLUSION Recovery of a small number of negative lymph nodes at axillary dissection likely understages patients and leads to undertreatment, resulting in an increased regional relapse rate and poorer survival. The use of systemic therapy may overcome this effect. The number of nodes removed, in conjunction with other prognostic factors, may be useful in selecting node-negative patients for systemic therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Evolving Treatment Strategies for Inflammatory Breast Cancer: A Population-Based Survival Analysis

Miguel Panades; Ivo A. Olivotto; Caroline Speers; Tamara Shenkier; Theodora A. Olivotto; Lorna Weir; Sharon J. Allan; Pauline T. Truong

PURPOSE To determine if mastectomy (Mx) use, chemotherapy (CT) intensity, or treatment sequence of CT, radiation therapy (RT), and Mx have improved outcome for inflammatory breast cancer (IBC). PATIENTS AND METHODS A retrospective analysis of 485 patients with IBC diagnosed in British Columbia between 1980 and 2000 analyzed locoregional relapse-free survival (LRFS) and breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS) by treatment intent and treatment received. Curative intent was defined as delivery of more than four cycles of anthracycline-based CT plus locoregional RT in patients without distant metastases. RESULTS Median follow-up among survivors was 6.5 years. Median BCSS was 1.0 and 3.2 years for patients with distant metastases at diagnosis or those who were curatively treated, respectively. Among patients treated curatively (n = 308), there were no significant differences in LRFS or BCSS with timing of Mx before or after CT/RT, time between diagnosis and RT, or the sequence of RT and CT. Patients receiving more intensive CT had improved 10-year BCSS compared with standard CT (43.7% v 26.3%; P = .04). Ten-year LRFS for patients having Mx after CT, Mx before CT, and without Mx was 62.8%, 58.6%, and 34.4%, respectively (P = .0001); the corresponding 10-year BCSS was 36.9%, 19.9%, and 22.5%, respectively (P = .005). On multivariate analysis, Mx was associated with improved LRFS (P = .04). Independent prognostic factors for BCSS were menopausal status (P = .02), estrogen receptor status (P = .02), and CT type (P = .05). CONCLUSION This retrospective analysis suggested that mastectomy, in conjunction with CT and RT, seemed to enhance locoregional control, whereas modern CT regimens seemed to improve BCSS.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 1995

Radiation treatment of cervical lymph node metastases from an unknown primary: an analysis of outcome by treatment volume and other prognostic factors

Lorna Weir; Thomas J. Keane; Bernard Cummings; Phyllis Goodman; Brian O'Sullivan; David Payne; Padraig Warde

One hundred and forty-four patients with diagnosis of carcinoma involving cervical lymph nodes from an unknown primary site were seen at the Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto between 1970 and 1986. This paper addresses the outcome of two treatment approaches using radiation treatment as potentially curative therapy. The treatment approaches compared in a retrospective analysis are radiation to the involved node regions alone (85 cases), and radiation to both the nodes and to potential primary sites in the head and neck (59 cases). The overall 5-year survival rate of the entire group of 144 cases was 41%. There was a trend to increased survival in favour of the group receiving radiation to the nodes and potential primary sites (p = 0.07), however, when differences in extent of nodal involvement were considered and adjusted for using the Cox Proportional Hazard Model, no difference in survival, or cause-specific survival was found between the two treatment groups (p = 0.18 and 0.22, respectively). A total of seven head and neck primary cancers were subsequently discovered, six in the group receiving radiation only to the nodes and one in the group receiving radiation to the nodes and primary sites. The results of this retrospective analysis need to be interpreted with caution but suggest that, for some patients with this diagnosis, radiation to the involved node region alone is adequate. A discussion of the literature is presented with attention to the effect of extent of treatment on outcome.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 1999

CANCER OF THE TONSIL : THE RESULTS OF IPSILATERAL RADIATION TREATMENT

Stewart M. Jackson; J. Hay; Albino D. Flores; Lorna Weir; Frances Wong; Carol Schwindt; Barbara Baerg

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The use of ipsilateral irradiation techniques to treat patients with carcinoma of the tonsil reduces the acute radiation reaction in the contralateral pharynx and late damage to the contralateral salivary tissue. However, this may also spare microscopic disease in apparently uninvolved contralateral lymph nodes. The purpose of this study was to analyse the survival and recurrence rates and sites of recurrance in a group of patients with carcinoma of the tonsil treated with ipsilateral techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between 1975 and 1993, 271 patients with invasive squamous cell cancer of the tonsil were referred to the Vancouver Cancer Centre (VCC). One hundred and seventy-eight received ipsilateral radiation treatment. Three received surgery only, six post-operative radiation, 12 supportive treatment only and 72 bilateral radiation treatment. In the absence of bilateral neck nodes and extensive lymphodenopathy, field sizes were generally kept small to include the primary tumour and the first echelon of nodes. The most common dose was 60 Gy in 25 daily fractions in 5 weeks (2.4 Gy per day). RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The disease specific survival for all patients treated by radical radiation treatment was 61% at 5 years. For the 178 patients who received ipsilateral radiation treatment the overall primary tumour control rate by ipsilateral radiation treatment alone was 75% and for T1 and T2 tumours 84%. Eight (7.5%) of 101 of these patients with N0 nodes at presentation and without prior failure at the primary site, developed nodal recurrence (four within the initially radiated high dose volume). Two developed contralateral nodes, and two developed field edge nodal recurrence, one cured by surgery. In 54 patients with N1 disease, five developed nodal recurrence, two within field, two contralateral, one of whom was cured by surgery, and one at field edge. In 23 patients with N2a, N2b or N3 disease node control was achieved from radiation treatment in 11 and two more were cured by surgery. All nodal failures were within the radiated volume. Overall, 10 of the 25 patients with nodal failure were cured by subsequent surgery. CONCLUSIONS Ipsilateral treatment of patients with carcinoma of the tonsil gives survival results that are at least as good as those reported with bilateral treatment with fewer side effects and a very low risk of failure in the contralateral neck.


Breast Journal | 2005

The Value of FDG Positron Emission Tomography in the Management of Patients with Breast Cancer

Lorna Weir; Daniel F. Worsley; Vanessa Bernstein

Abstract:  Increasing experience with positron emission tomography (PET) scanning in breast cancer patients is revealing a significant role for this imaging modality. This report summarizes the experience of 2‐[F18]fluoro‐2‐deoxy‐D‐glucose (FDG) PET scanning in 165 breast cancer patients from the BC Cancer Agency, British Columbia, Canada, and reviews the literature on this topic. Using the database at PETSCAN Vancouver, we identified imaged patients with a diagnosis of breast cancer. We then conducted a retrospective review of these patients’ BC Cancer Agency charts to extract demographic and follow‐up information. Between November 2000 and March 2003 we identified 165 patients with histologically confirmed breast cancer who had undergone PET scanning, were registered at the BC Cancer Agency, and had follow‐up information. The median patient age was 52 years. The sensitivity of PET in detecting axillary metastases was 28%, and the specificity was 86%. At diagnosis, 5% of patients were diagnosed with distant metastases. In patients undergoing PET scanning because of suspected recurrence, the sensitivity and specificity for detecting recurrence were 89% and 88%, respectively. Distant metastases were demonstrated in 30% of patients who were thought only to have local‐regional recurrence. The results suggest that there are two clinical situations in which PET appears to be particularly valuable. The first is in the evaluation of patients who are suspected of having a tumor recurrence. The other is in identifying patients with multifocal or distant sites of malignancy who otherwise appear to have an isolated, potentially curable, local‐regional recurrence.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2015

Identification of a Low-Risk Luminal A Breast Cancer Cohort That May Not Benefit From Breast Radiotherapy

Fei-Fei Liu; Wei Shi; Susan J. Done; Naomi Miller; Melania Pintilie; David Voduc; Torsten O. Nielsen; Sharon Nofech-Mozes; Martin C. Chang; Timothy J. Whelan; Lorna Weir; Ivo A. Olivotto; David R. McCready; Anthony Fyles

PURPOSE To determine the prognostic and predictive value of intrinsic subtyping by using immunohistochemical (IHC) biomarkers for ipsilateral breast relapse (IBR) in participants in an early breast cancer randomized trial of tamoxifen with or without breast radiotherapy (RT). PATIENTS AND METHODS IHC analysis of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), cytokeratin 5/6, epidermal growth factor receptor, and Ki-67 was conducted on 501 of 769 available blocks. Patients were classified as luminal A (n = 265), luminal B (n = 165), or high-risk subtype (luminal HER2, n = 22; HER2 enriched, n = 13; basal like, n = 30; or triple-negative nonbasal, n = 6). Median follow-up was 10 years. RESULTS Classification by subtype was prognostic for IBR (10-year estimates: luminal A, 5.2%; luminal B, 10.5%; high-risk subtypes, 21.3%; P < .001). Luminal subtypes seemed to derive less benefit from RT (luminal A hazard ratio [HR], 0.40; luminal B HR, 0.51) than high-risk subtypes (HR, 0.13); however, the overall subtype-treatment interaction term was not significant (P = .26). In an exploratory analysis of women with clinical low-risk (age older than 60 years, T1, grade 1 or 2) luminal A tumors (n = 151), 10-year IBR was 3.1% versus 11.8% for the high-risk cohort (n = 341; P = .0063). Clinical low-risk luminal A patients had a 10-year IBR of 1.3% with tamoxifen versus 5.0% with tamoxifen plus RT (P = .42). Multivariable analysis showed that RT (HR, 0.31; P < .001), clinical risk group (HR, 2.2; P = .025), and luminal A subtype (HR, 0.25; P < .001) were significantly associated with IBR. CONCLUSION IHC subtyping was prognostic for IBR but was not predictive of benefit from RT. Further studies may validate the exploratory finding of a low-risk luminal A group who may be spared breast RT.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Impact of Providing Audiotapes of Primary Adjuvant Treatment Consultations to Women With Breast Cancer: A Multisite, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Thomas F. Hack; Tom Pickles; Barry D. Bultz; J. Dean Ruether; Lorna Weir; Lesley F. Degner; John R. Mackey

PURPOSE Women with breast cancer were provided with an audiotape of their primary adjuvant treatment consultation, and the following patient outcomes were measured at 12 weeks postconsultation: perceived degree of information provision, audiotape satisfaction and use, communication satisfaction with oncologist, mood state, and cancer-specific quality of life. PATIENTS AND METHODS Participants included 628 women newly diagnosed with breast cancer and 40 oncologists from six cancer centers in Canada. The patients were block randomized to one of four consultation groups: standard care control, not audiotaped; audiotaped, no audiotape given; audiotaped, patient given audiotape; and audiotaped, patient offered choice of receiving audiotape or not. RESULTS Patients receiving the consultation audiotape had significantly better recall of having discussed side effects of treatment than patients who did not receive the audiotape. Audiotape benefit was not significantly related to patient satisfaction with communication, mood state, or quality of life at 12 weeks postconsultation, and was not significantly affected by choice of receiving the audiotape. Patients rated the audiotape intervention positively, with an average score of 83.9 of 100. CONCLUSION Audiotape provision benefits patients by facilitating their perception of being informed about treatment side effects, but does not significantly influence patient satisfaction with communication, mood state, or quality of life.


Psycho-oncology | 2009

Predictors of distress and quality of life in patients undergoing cancer therapy: impact of treatment type and decisional role.

Thomas F. Hack; Tom Pickles; J. Dean Ruether; Lorna Weir; Barry D. Bultz; John R. Mackey; Lesley F. Degner

Purpose: The purpose of this secondary investigation was to examine the impact of the type of treatment received and the perceived role in treatment decision making in predicting distress and cancer‐specific quality of life in patients newly diagnosed with breast or prostate cancer.

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Melania Pintilie

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Robert Olson

University of British Columbia

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