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Observational Multicenter Study on the Prognostic Relevance of Coagulation Activation in Risk Assessment and Stratification in Locally Advanced Breast Cancer. Outline of the ARIAS Trial

A hypercoagulable state may either underlie or frankly accompany cancer disease at its onset or emerge in course of cancer development. Whichever the case, hypercoagulation may severely limit administration of cancer therapies, impose integrative supporting treatments and finally have an impact on p...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pizzuti, Laura, Krasniqi, Eriseld, Mandoj, Chiara, Marinelli, Daniele, Sergi, Domenico, Capomolla, Elisabetta, Paoletti, Giancarlo, Botti, Claudio, Kayal, Ramy, Ferranti, Francesca Romana, Sperduti, Isabella, Perracchio, Letizia, Sanguineti, Giuseppe, Marchetti, Paolo, Ciliberto, Gennaro, Barchiesi, Giacomo, Mazzotta, Marco, Barba, Maddalena, Conti, Laura, Vici, Patrizia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7226579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32244657
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12040849
Descripción
Sumario:A hypercoagulable state may either underlie or frankly accompany cancer disease at its onset or emerge in course of cancer development. Whichever the case, hypercoagulation may severely limit administration of cancer therapies, impose integrative supporting treatments and finally have an impact on prognosis. Within a flourishing research pipeline, a recent study of stage I-IIA breast cancer patients has allowed the development of a prognostic model including biomarkers of coagulation activation, which efficiently stratified prognosis of patients in the study cohort. We are now validating our risk assessment tool in an independent cohort of 108 patients with locally advanced breast cancer with indication to neo-adjuvant therapy followed by breast surgery. Within this study population, we will use our tool for risk assessment and stratification in reference to 1. pathologic complete response rate at definitive surgery, intended as our primary endpoint, and 2. rate of thromboembolic events, intended as our secondary endpoint. Patients’ screening and enrollment procedures are currently in place. The trial will be shortly enriched by experimental tasks centered on next-generation sequencing techniques for identifying additional molecular targets of treatments which may integrate current standards of therapy in high-risk patients.