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Featured researches published by Mary Mahler.


Journal of Oncology Practice | 2015

Lifestyle Behaviors in Elderly Cancer Survivors: A Comparison With Middle-Age Cancer Survivors

Chongya Niu; Lawson Eng; Xin Qiu; Xiaowei Shen; Osvaldo Espin-Garcia; Yuyao Song; Dan Pringle; Mary Mahler; Oleksandr Halytskyy; Rebecca Charow; Christine Lam; Ravi M. Shani; Jodie Villeneuve; Kyoko Tiessen; M Catherine Brown; Peter Selby; Doris Howell; Jennifer M. Jones; Wei Xu; Geoffrey Liu; Shabbir M.H. Alibhai

PURPOSE Improved cancer screening and treatment have led to a greater focus on cancer survivorship care. Older cancer survivors may be a unique population. We evaluated whether older cancer survivors (age ≥ 65 years) had lifestyle behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge distinct from younger survivors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Adult cancer survivors with diverse cancer subtypes were recruited from Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (Toronto, Ontario, Canada). Multivariable models evaluated the effect of age on smoking, alcohol, and physical activity habits, attitudes toward and knowledge of these habits on cancer outcomes, and lifestyle information and recommendations received from health care providers, adjusted for sociodemographic and clinicopathologic covariates. RESULTS Among the 616 survivors recruited, 23% (n = 139) were older. Median follow-up since diagnosis was 24 months. Older survivors were more likely ex-smokers and less likely current smokers than younger survivors, but they were less likely to know that smoking could affect cancer treatment (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 0.53; P = .007) or prognosis (adjusted OR, 0.53; P = .008). Older survivors were more likely to perceive alcohol as improving overall survival (adjusted OR, 2.39; P = .02). Rates of meeting moderate-to-vigorous physical activity guidelines 1 year before diagnosis (adjusted OR, 0.55; P = .02) and maintaining and improving their exercise levels to meet these guidelines after diagnosis (adjusted OR, 0.48; P = .02) were lower in older survivors. Older and younger cancer survivors reported similar rates of receiving lifestyle behavior information from health care providers (P = .36 to .98). CONCLUSION Older cancer survivors reported being less aware of the impact of smoking on their overall health, more likely perceived alcohol as beneficial to survival, and were less likely to meet exercise goals compared with younger survivors. Survivorship programs need to consider age when counseling on lifestyle behaviors.


Current Oncology | 2016

Socioeconomic status and lifestyle behaviours in cancer survivors: smoking and physical activity.

Hiten Naik; Xin Qiu; M. C. Brown; Lawson Eng; Dan Pringle; Mary Mahler; Henrique Hon; Kyoko Tiessen; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Christina Gonos; Rebecca Charow; Vivien Pat; Margaret Irwin; Lindsay Herzog; Anthea Ho; Wei Xu; Jennifer M. Jones; Doris Howell; Geoffrey Liu

PURPOSE Smoking cessation and increased physical activity (pa) have been linked to better outcomes in cancer survivors. We assessed whether socioeconomic factors influence changes in those behaviours after a cancer diagnosis. METHODS As part of a cross-sectional study, a diverse group of cancer survivors at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (Toronto, ON), completed a questionnaire about past and current lifestyle behaviours and perceptions about the importance of those behaviours with respect to their health. The influence of socioeconomic indicators on smoking status and physical inactivity at 1 year before and after diagnosis were assessed using multivariable logistic regression with adjustment for clinico-demographic factors. RESULTS Of 1222 participants, 1192 completed the smoking component. Of those respondents, 15% smoked before diagnosis, and 43% of those smokers continued to smoke after. The proportion of survivors who continued to smoke increased with lower education level (p = 0.03). Of the 1106 participants answering pa questions, 39% reported being physically inactive before diagnosis, of whom 82% remained inactive afterward. Survivors with a lower education level were most likely to remain inactive after diagnosis (p = 0.003). Lower education level, household income, and occupation were associated with the perception that pa had no effect or could worsen fatigue and quality of life (p ≤ 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS In cancer survivors, education level was a major modifier of smoking and pa behaviours. Lower socioeconomic status was associated with incorrect perceptions about pa. Targeting at-risk survivors by education level should be evaluated as a strategy in cancer survivorship programs.


The Canadian journal of clinical pharmacology | 2016

Cancer Patients? Willingness to Routinely Complete the EQ-5D Instrument at Clinic Visits.

Hiten Naik; Xin Qiu; M Catherine Brown; Mary Mahler; Henrique Hon; Kyoko Tiessen; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Christina Gonos; Rebecca Charow; Vivien Pat; Margaret Irwin; Lindsay Herzog; Anthea Ho; Wei Xu; Doris Howell; Soo Jin Seung; Geoffrey Liu; Nicole Mittmann

Evidence from literature illustrates that from a pathophysiological perspective, sulfonylureas (SU) may impact the heart three ways: directly by intrinsic properties from a pharmacological receptor perspective, indirectly by adverse effects related to hypoglycemia, and obesity. From a pharmacologlogical receptor perspective, SU can bind to ATP-sensitive potassium channels in cardiomyocytes. Channel binding by SU in cardiac tissue may prevent ischemia myocardial protective mechanisms. From a pathophysiological perspective, obesity is associated with cardiac issues such as pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy, arrhythmia, and atrial fibrillation. From a pathophysiological perspective, hypoglycemia is associated with cardiac sympathetic activation and QT prolongation. With the high prevalence and incidence of diabetes, obesity and aging, future basic and clinical studies should further explore the questions related to the pathophysiology of SU utilization and potential cardiac impact in randomized clinical trials and real-world outcome research settings.Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic progressive respiratory disease with partially reversible airway obstruction and lung hyperventilation progressing to increasingly frequent and severe exacerbations. The condition is mainly caused by smoking but may result from other causes such as environmental exposure or occupational hazards. Based on Statistics Canada survey data the prevalence of COPD is approximately 4% of the general population, or about 780,000 adults in Canada with 28,000 in Manitoba.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Canadian cancer site-specific health utility values: Creating the basis for measuring value and costs of therapy.

Hiten Naik; Doris Howell; Xin Qiu; Catherine Brown; Ashlee Vennettilli; Margaret Irwin; Vivien Pat; Hannah Solomon; Tian Wang; Henrique Hon; Lawson Eng; Mary Mahler; Kyoko Tiessen; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Dan Pringle; Wei Xu; Soo Jin Seung; Nicole Mittmann; Geoffrey Liu

7 Background: Health utility values (HUVs) play an integral role when conducting health economic analyses, but a paucity of reference HUVs exists for cancer patients. Using EQ-5D, we generated reference HUVs for multiple malignancies. We further assessed patient willingness to compete the instrument on a regular basis by adding the EQ-5D to an Ontario-wide patient-reported symptom tool mandated by Cancer Care Ontario, the provincial cancer government agency. METHODS 1,831 cancer patients across all non-CNS solid and hematologic cancer sites at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre completed the EQ-5D instrument; a subset (n=618) were asked about the acceptability of regularly completing the EQ-5D. HUVs were calculated using Canadian valuations. RESULTS The mean±SD HUV for all patients was 0.81±0.15, but were significantly different across different disease sites (p<0.0001): Testicular cancer, 0.87±0.13; prostate, 0.87±0.15; colorectal, 0.83±0.12; head/neck, 0.82±0.15; lymphoma, 0.82±0.15; breast, 0.81±0.17; esophageal, 0.81±0.16; ovarian, 0.79±0.15; leukemia, 0.78±0.15; lung, 0.78±0.13 and myeloma, 0.77±0.14. Confirming the validity of these HUVs, patients with PRO-ECOG scores of 0, 1, 2 and 3 had HUVs of 0.90±0.14, 0.77±0.11, 0.65±0.14 and 0.59±0.19, respectively (p<0.0001). In patients with solid tumors, those with local disease had HUVs of 0.82±0.15; metastatic disease, 0.80±0.15; p=0.015. 88% of patients reported that the EQ-5D was easy to complete, 92% took less than 5 minutes, 89% were satisfied with its length and 86% were satisfied with the types of questions asked. Importantly, 92% reported that they would complete the EQ-5D, even if it was used solely for research purposes and 73% agreed with the notion of completing it regularly at their clinic visits. CONCLUSIONS We present the first Canadian reference dataset of HUVs for common cancers; stage-and site-specific reference values will be presented at the meeting. Mean HUVs varied by disease site, performance status, and disease severity. Furthermore, a majority of patients surveyed were willing to complete the EQ-5D on a regular basis, suggesting that routine administration is feasible across Ontario.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Use of iPad technology to determine cancer patient-reported preferences for and understanding of pharmacogenetic testing (PGT).

Petra Martin; Catherine Brown; Sinead Cuffe; Dan Pringle; Mary Mahler; Jodie Villeneuve; Chongya Niu; Rebecca Charow; Christine Lam; Ravi M. Shani; Henrique Hon; Memori Otsuka; Osvaldo Epsin-Garcia; Wei Xu; Shabbir Alibbhai; Jodie Jenkinson; Geoffrey Liu

319 Background: PGT in oncology can be used to predict the efficacy and toxicity of a particular treatment in an individual. Previous work by our group has demonstrated that among cancer patients willing to undergo chemotherapy, >98% wanted PGT testing if it could identify patients who would respond to chemo. However, in the original study using a paper questionnaire, 22% of patients did not understand the concept of PGT and its clinical implications. Therefore, we have devised a simpler, more visual questionnaire in electronic format using iPad technology and simple animations. We are assessing if patient understanding using this format is increased and also if patients prefer completing the survey with this novel technology. METHODS An interim analysis of a broad cross-section of cancer patients using an iPad was performed. PGT questions related to hypothetical efficacy, toxicity, time to test results, willingness to pay as well as understanding of PGT scenarios were assessed. RESULTS 135 cancer patients (87% adjuvant, 12% metastatic; 27% breast, 25% colon, 22% heme malignancy, 23% other) attending Princess Margaret Hosptial participated. 85% of patients accepted chemo that had a 5% absolute improvement in survival and <10% chance of side effects. 94% of patients chose to have PGT if it could identify subsets of patients who would benefit from chemo. The median that patients were willing to pay for PGT was


Cancer Prevention Research | 2015

Abstract B15: Second-hand smoke (SHS) and smoking cessation in non-tobacco related cancers

Lawson Eng; Xin Qiu; Jie Su; M Catherine Brown; Margaret Irwin; Dan Pringle; Hiten Naik; Chongya Niu; Mary Mahler; Henrique Hon; Kyoko Tiessen; Rebecca Charow; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Vivien Pat; Lindsay Herzog; Anthea Ho; Jennifer M. Jones; Doris Howell; David P. Goldstein; Meredith Giuliani; Wei Xu; Peter Selby; Geoffrey Liu

250 (range


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Involving clinic patients in systematic symptom reporting to improve cancer care: Exploring prevalence of sleep disturbances (SD) and fatigue (FAT).

Margaret Irwin; Catherine Brown; Ashlee Vennettilli; Lawson Eng; Aein Zarrin; Aditi Dobriyal; Linda Chen; Maryam Mirshams; Deval Patel; Henrique Hon; Vivien Pat; Anthea Ho; Hannah Solomon; Kyoko Tiessen; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Mary Mahler; Wei Xu; Geoffrey Liu; Doris Howell

0-


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Effect of physical activity (PA) perceptions in cancer survivors on PA behaviors: Helping health care providers improve patient communication.

Hiten Naik; Geoffrey Liu; Xin Qiu; Dan Pringle; Catherine Brown; Lawson Eng; Mary Mahler; Henrique Hon; Kyoko Tiessen; Henry Thai; Valerie Ho; Christina Gonos; Rebecca Charow; Vivien Pat; Margaret Irwin; Lindsay Herzog; Anthea Ho; Jennifer M. Jones; Wei Xu; Doris Howell

5,000), however the median that patients felt was a reasonable price was


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

Complementary and alternative medicine and other health behaviors.

Donna M. Graham; Osvaldo Espin-Garcia; Catherine Brown; Oleksandr Halytskyy; Mary Mahler; Dan Pringle; Lawson Eng; Chongya Niu; Christine Lam; Rebecca Charow; Jodie Villeneuve; Ravi M. Shani; Kyoko Tiessen; Doris Howell; Jennifer M. Jones; Shabbir M.H. Alibhai; Wei Xu; Geoffrey Liu

100 (


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Use of online resources by patients with cancer: The Canadian experience.

Lawson Eng; Dan Pringle; Catherine Brown; Xiaowei Shen; Mary Mahler; Chongya Niu; Jodie Villeneuve; Rebecca Charow; Christine Lam; Ravi M. Shani; Shabbir M.H. Alibhai; Jennifer M. Jones; Wei Xu; Geoffrey Liu; Samir C. Grover

0-

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Geoffrey Liu

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Doris Howell

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Lawson Eng

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Kyoko Tiessen

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Dan Pringle

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Henrique Hon

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Wei Xu

Nanjing Normal University

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Chongya Niu

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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Henry Thai

University Health Network

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Hiten Naik

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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