Pamela Catton
University of Toronto
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Featured researches published by Pamela Catton.
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2001
Charles Catton; Mary Gospodarowicz; Padraig Warde; Tony Panzarella; Pamela Catton; M. McLean; Michael Milosevic
PURPOSE To evaluate the outcome of adjuvant and salvage radiotherapy (RT) after radical prostatectomy (RP) for clinically localized prostate cancer using conventional clinical end-points, and the biochemical relapse-free rate (bRFR). METHODS Between 1987 and 1994, 113 node negative, hormonally naïve men received RT 1 month to 12 years after RP. Adjuvant RT was given for positive resection margins and/or pT3 disease. Salvage RT was given for a persistently elevated prostatic specific antigen (PSA), a rising PSA, or palpable recurrence post RP. Clinical and biochemical endpoints determined outcome. Log-rank testing and the Cox proportional hazards model identified factors predictive for biochemical relapse free rate. RESULTS Median follow-up after RT was 3.7 years (range 0.2-9 years). Five-year clinical local control was 95% for patients with no palpable evidence of disease and 59% for those with palpable recurrence (P < 0.0001). 5-year bRFR was 81% for adjuvant RT, 19% for salvage of biochemical recurrence, 0% for patients with palpable disease (P < 0.0001). Improved bRFR for adjuvant and salvage RT was predicted by a Gleason score < 7 vs. 7 vs. > 7 (hazard ratio 1.53; 95% CI 0.99-2.35) and an undetectable pre-RT PSA vs. PSA < 2.0 ng/ml vs. PSA > 2.0 ng/ml (hazard ratio 3.81; 95% CI 2.47-5.87). Seminal vesicle involvement was not a statistically significant independent predictor of bRFR. CONCLUSIONS The most favourable bRFR was observed for adjuvant therapy. Salvage was most successful with a pre-RT PSA < 2.0 ng/ml, or Gleason score < 7. Few patients with a pre-RT PSA > 2.0 ng/ml were salvaged, and none with palpable recurrence. These patients require investigation of alternative salvage strategies.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1998
C.Shun Wong; Bernard Cummings; James D. Brierley; Charles Catton; M. McLean; Pamela Catton; Yong Hao
PURPOSE To assess the local control and survival in patients who received pelvic irradiation for locally recurrent rectal carcinoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS The records of 519 patients with locally recurrent rectal carcinoma treated principally with external-beam radiation therapy between 1975 to 1985 at a single institute were retrospectively reviewed. These included 326 patients who relapsed locally following previous abdominoperineal resection, 151 after previous low anterior resection, and 42 after previous local excision or electrocoagulation for the primary. No patients had received adjuvant radiation therapy or chemotherapy for the primary disease. Concurrent extrapelvic distant metastases were found in 164 (32%) patients at local recurrence and, in the remaining 355, the relapse was confined to the pelvis. There were 290 men and 229 women whose age ranged from 23 to 91 years (median = 65). Median time from initial surgery to radiation therapy for local recurrence was 18 months (3-138 months). Radiation therapy was given with varying dose-fractionation schedules, total doses ranging from 4.4 to 65.0 Gy (median = 30 Gy) over 1 to 92 days (median = 22 days). For 214 patients who received a total dose > or = 35 Gy, radiation therapy was given in 1.8 to 2.5 Gy daily fractions. RESULTS The median survival was 14 months and the median time to local disease progression was 5 months from date of pelvic irradiation. The 5-year survival was 5%, and the pelvic disease progression-free rate was 7%. Twelve patients remained alive and free of disease at 5 years after pelvic irradiation. Upon multivariate analysis, overall survival was positively correlated with ECOG performance status (p = 0.0001), absence of extrapelvic metastases (p = 0.0001), long intervals from initial surgery to radiation therapy for local recurrence (p = 0.0001), total radiation dose (p = 0.0001), and absence of obstructive uropathy (p = 0.0013). Pelvic disease progression-free rates were positively correlated with ECOG performance status (p = 0.0001), total radiation dose (p = 0.0001), and previous conservative surgery for the primary (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Survival is poor for patients who develop local recurrence following previous surgery for rectal carcinoma. Pelvic radiation therapy provides only short-term palliation, and future efforts should be directed to the use of effective adjuvant therapy for patients with rectal carcinoma who are at high risk of local recurrence.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2004
Chris Parker; Michael Milosevic; Ants Toi; Joan Sweet; Tony Panzarella; Robert G. Bristow; Charles Catton; Pamela Catton; Juanita Crook; Mary Gospodarowicz; M. McLean; Padraig Warde; Richard P. Hill
PURPOSE To describe the oxygenation of clinically localized prostate cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS Intraprostatic oxygen tension was measured using the Eppendorf electrode in 55 unanesthetized men with localized prostate cancer before radiotherapy. Measurements were made along two tracks through regions of suspected tumor in the prostate, and core needle biopsies were then obtained from the same regions. RESULTS The median pO(2) ranged from 0.2 to 57.3 mm Hg, and the grand median pO(2) was 4.5 mm Hg. The percentage of oxygen readings <5 mm Hg (HP(5)) ranged from 0% to 100% (median 60%). The track 1 oxygen readings were greater than those from track 2. Statistically significant heterogeneity was found in the individual oxygen readings: the between- and within-tumor components accounted for 32% and 68% of the total variability, respectively. However, the between-tumor variability in HP(5) significantly exceeded the within-tumor variability (61% vs. 39%). No association was found between oxygen values and clinical factors, including age, T stage, Gleason score, prostate-specific antigen level, hemoglobin concentration, or prior hormonal treatment. No difference was noted in the oxygenation between regions of tumor and normal prostate tissue, as determined from the core biopsies. CONCLUSION Localized prostate cancer is characterized by marked hypoxia and significant heterogeneity in oxygenation, similar to other human tumors. The normal prostate may contain regions of low oxygen concentration. HP(5), as determined in this study, should adequately discriminate among patients with prostate cancer and allow the independent prognostic significance of oxygenation to be evaluated once the study matures.
Brachytherapy | 2002
Juanita Crook; M. Milosevic; Pamela Catton; Ivan Yeung; Tara Haycocks; Thao Tran; Charles Catton; M. McLean; Tony Panzarella; Masoom A. Haider
PURPOSE Permanent seed implants are accepted treatment of early stage prostate cancer. Implant quality is assessed by post implant CT-based dosimetry but prostate contours on CT images are obscured by metallic seed artefact and edema. Outcome depends on implant quality, but perceived implant quality depends on accurate prostate contouring. This study documents inter observer variation in prostate contouring on post implant CT scans. METHODS AND MATERIALS Ten patients had implant dosimetry calculated on 4 copies of the post implant CT scan. Prostate contours from MRI-CT fusion were the gold standard for prostate edge identification. CTs were contoured by an experienced prostate brachytherapist matching CT images to the pre implant TRUS, and by 2 GU radiation oncologists experienced in conformal radiotherapy planning. Dosimetry was compared to that obtained using MRI-CT fusion in terms of D90 and V100. RESULTS Contours and dosimetry were not reproducible among the 3 observers. The V100s of the experienced brachytherapist differed from that of MRI-CT fusion by a mean of 2.4% compared to 9.1% and 4.4% for observers 1 and 2, and the D90 by a mean of 9.3 Gy compared to 30.3 and 14.4 Gy for observers 1 and 2. CONCLUSIONS Quality assessment of prostate brachytherapy based on 1 month post implant CT is difficult. This may obscure the dose-response relationship in brachytherapy as well as create problems for quality assurance in multicentre trials evaluating brachytherapy against standard modalities. Whenever possible, MRI-CT fusion should be employed to verify prostate contours post implant.
Medical Education | 2000
Elizabeth Murray; Larry D. Gruppen; Pamela Catton; Richard Hays; James O. Woolliscroft
Medical education is not exempt from increasing societal expectations of accountability. Competition for financial resources requires medical educators to demonstrate cost‐effective educational practice; health care practitioners, the products of medical education programmes, must meet increasing standards of professionalism; the culture of evidence‐based medicine demands an evaluation of the effect educational programmes have on health care and service delivery. Educators cannot demonstrate that graduates possess the required attributes, or that their programmes have the desired impact on health care without appropriate assessment tools and measures of outcome.
Cancer | 2005
Justin Lee; David R. W. Hodgson; Edward Chow; Andrea Bezjak; Pamela Catton; Debbie Tsuji; Mary Ann O'Brien; Cyril Danjoux; Charles Hayter; Padraig Warde; Mary Gospodarowicz
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has previously been described as being less responsive to radiotherapy (RT) than other tumor types. The authors conducted a prospective study to assess the effect of RT on symptoms and quality of life (QOL) in patients with metastatic RCC.
Journal of Cancer Survivorship | 2014
Sophie Lebel; Christine Maheu; Monique Lefebvre; Scott Secord; Christine Courbasson; Mina Singh; Lynne Jolicoeur; Aronela Benea; Cheryl Harris; Michael Fung Kee Fung; Zeev Rosberger; Pamela Catton
BackgroundEvidence suggests that fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is one of the most frequently cited unmet needs among cancer survivors and is associated with psychological distress, stress-response symptoms, and lower quality of life, as well as increased use of health care resources. Despite these factors, few manualized interventions exist to address FCR among cancer survivors.PurposeTo develop, manualize, and pilot test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a 6-week cognitive-existential (CE) group intervention designed to address FCR in women with breast or ovarian cancer.MethodsThis study was a single-arm multi-site study with pre-, post-, and 3-month follow-up measurement occasions.ResultsA total of 56 breast or ovarian cancer survivors enrolled in the study; 44 completed the CE group intervention. Following the intervention, women experienced a reduction in the primary study outcome measure of FCR and secondary study outcome measures of cancer-specific distress and uncertainty. They also reported improvements in secondary study outcome measures of quality of life and coping. The effect sizes of the observed changes were for the most part in the medium to large effect range; furthermore, almost all changes were sustained at 3-month follow-up.ConclusionThis brief intervention appears feasible and has shown promising results in addressing FCR and related secondary outcomes of cancer-specific distress, uncertainty, quality of life, and coping; however, it should be further tested using a randomized controlled study design to more definitively assess its efficacy.Implications for Cancer SurvivorsFCR is a near-universal worry for cancer survivors that, when left unaddressed, tends to remain stable over time. This study has important implications for all cancer survivors as it is the first published intervention that provides preliminary evidence of its efficacy in decreasing fear of cancer recurrence.
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2000
Michael Milosevic; Padraig Warde; Diponkar Banerjee; Mary Gospodarowicz; M. McLean; Pamela Catton; Charles Catton
Abstract Background and purpose : Urethral carcinoma in women is uncommon. This study was undertaken to evaluate the role of radiotherapy in the treatment of these tumors. Materials and methods : The hospital records of 34 women with primary urethral carcinoma were retrospectively reviewed. There were 15 squamous cell carcinomas, 13 transitional cell carcinomas, and six adenocarcinomas. The primary tumor was >4cm in size in eight patients, involved the proximal urethra in 19 and extended to adjacent organs in 22. Inguinal or iliac lymphadenopathy was present in nine patients. There were eight TNM stage I/II tumors, 11 stage III tumors and 15 stage IV tumors. Radiotherapy was administered only to the primary tumor in 15 patients, and to the primary tumor and regional lymph nodes in the remaining 19 patients. Brachytherapy with or without external radiation was used to treat the primary tumor in 20 patients. Results : Tumor recurred in 21 patients. The 7-year actuarial overall and cause-specific survivals were 41 and 45%, respectively. Large primary tumor bulk and treatment with external beam radiation alone (no brachytherapy) were independent adverse prognostic factors for local tumor recurrence. Brachytherapy reduced the risk of local recurrence by a factor of 4.2. The beneficial effect of brachytherapy was most prominently seen in patients with bulky primary disease. Large tumor size was the only independent adverse predictor of overall disease recurrence and death from cancer. Conclusions : Radiotherapy is an effective treatment for carcinoma of the female urethra and preserves normal anatomy and function. Brachytherapy improves local tumor control, possibly as a result of the higher radiation dose that can safely be delivered.
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2010
David Wiljer; Kevin J. Leonard; Sara Urowitz; Emma Apatu; Christine Massey; Naa Kwarley Quartey; Pamela Catton
BackgroundPersonal health records (PHRs) provide patients with access to personal health information (PHI) and targeted education. The use of PHRs has the potential to improve a wide range of outcomes, including empowering patients to be more active participants in their care. There are a number of widespread barriers to adoption, including privacy and security considerations. In addition, there are clinical concerns that patients could become anxious or distressed when accessing complex medical information. This study assesses the implementation of a PHR, and its impact on anxiety levels and perceptions of self-efficacy in a sample of breast cancer patients.MethodsA quasi-experimental pre-test/post-test design was used to collect data from participants to evaluate the use of the PHR. Study participants completed background and pre-assessment questionnaires and were then registered into the portal. By entering an activation key, participants were then able to review their lab results and diagnostic imaging reports. After six weeks, participants completed post-assessment questionnaires and usability heuristics. All data were collected using an online survey tool. Data were cleaned and analyzed using SAS v9.1.ResultsA total of 311 breast cancer patients completed demographic and pre-assessment questionnaires, 250 registered to use the online intervention, and 125 participants completed all required study elements. Matching the pre- and post-anxiety scores demonstrated a decrease in mean anxiety scores (-2.2, p = 0.03); the chemotherapy sub-group had a statistically insignificant mean increase (1.8, p = .14). There was no mean change in self-efficacy scores.ConclusionsParticipants generally found the portal easy to use; however, the perceived value of improved participation was not detected in the self-efficacy scores. Having access to personal health information did not increase anxiety levels. While these results suggest that the use of this PHR may be of benefit for informing patients, further research is required to investigate the impact on the patients experiences, their participation in their care, their relationships with the health care team, and their health outcomes.
Gynecologic Oncology | 2012
Janet Papadakos; Sophie Bussière-Côté; Nazek Abdelmutti; Pamela Catton; Audrey Jusko Friedman; Christine Massey; Sara Urowitz
OBJECTIVES In preparation for the launch of a gynecologic oncology survivorship program, this study looked at the informational needs of women with gynecologic cancers. Although studies have touched on some of these needs, no published literature has investigated the comprehensive informational needs of gynecologic oncology patients within all sites of gynecologic cancers. METHODS A needs assessment, consisting of a self-administered questionnaire, was conducted at an ambulatory gynecologic oncology clinic from August 2010 to March 2011. This study investigated the informational needs of patients, including the importance of information, the amount desired, and the preferred mode of delivery. Informational needs were grouped into six domains: medical, practical, physical, emotional, social, and spiritual. RESULTS 185 surveys were analyzed and the majority of the respondents were Caucasian (77%) and over the age of 50 (66%). Forty-nine percent of respondents were diagnosed with ovarian cancer, and there was an even distribution between newly diagnosed patients (38%), those in long-term follow-up (27%), and those with recurrent disease (37%). Overall, respondents placed more importance on receiving medical information (P<0.01). The three preferred education modalities were; pamphlets, one-on-one discussions with health care professionals and websites. Age, education, and disease site were associated with differing informational needs. CONCLUSIONS This study has highlighted the most important informational needs of patients with gynecologic malignancies in our patient population. This information may guide the development of clinical survivorship programs and educational resources for patients in the future.