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Browsing by Author "Strasser, Florian"

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    Fatigue in palliative care patients - an EAPC approach
    (Sage Publications Ltd, 2008)
    Radbruch, Lukas
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    Strasser, Florian
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    Eisner, Frank
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    Goncalves, Jose Ferraz
    ;
    Loge, Jon
    ;
    Kaasa, Stein
    ;
    Nauck, Friedemann  
    ;
    Stone, Patrick
    Fatigue is one of the most frequent symptoms in palliative care patients, reported in 80% of cancer patients and in up to 99% of patients following radio- or chemotherapy. Fatigue also plays a major role in palliative care for noncancer patients, with large percentages of patients with HIV, multiple sclerosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or heart failure reporting fatigue. This paper presents the position of an expert working group of the European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC), evaluating the available evidence on diagnosis and treatment of fatigue in palliative care patients and providing the basis for future discussions. As the expert group feels that culture and language influence the approach to fatigue in different European countries, a focus was on cultural issues in the assessment and treatment of fatigue in palliative care. As a working definition, fatigue was defined as a subjective feeling of tiredness, weakness or lack of energy. Qualitative differences between fatigue in cancer patients and in healthy controls have been proposed, but these differences seem to be only an expression of the overwhelming intensity of cancer-related fatigue. The pathophysiology of fatigue in palliative care patients is not fully understood. For a systematic approach, primary fatigue, most probably related to high load of proinflammatory cytokines and secondary fatigue from concurrent syndromes and comorbidities may be differentiated. Fatigue is generally recognized as a multidimensional construct, with a physical and cognitive dimension acknowledged by all authors. As fatigue is an inherent word only in the English and French language, but not in other European languages, screening for fatigue should include questions on weakness as a paraphrase for the physical dimension and on tiredness as a paraphrase for the cognitive dimension. Treatment of fatigue should include causal interventions for secondary fatigue and symptomatic treatment with pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions. Strong evidence has been accumulated that aerobic exercise will reduce fatigue levels in cancer survivors and patients receiving cancer treatment. In the final stage of life, fatigue may provide protection and shielding from suffering for the patient and thus treatment may be detrimental. Identification of the time point, where treatment of fatigue is no longer indicated is important to alleviate distress at the end of life.
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    Orphan disease status of cancer cachexia in the USA and in the European Union: a systematic review
    (2019)
    Anker, Markus S.
    ;
    Holcomb, Richard
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    Muscaritoli, Maurizio
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    von Haehling, Stephan
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    Haverkamp, Wilhelm
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    Jatoi, Aminah
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    Morley, John E.
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    Strasser, Florian
    ;
    Landmesser, Ulf
    ;
    Coats, Andrew J.S.
    ;
    Anker, Stefan D.
    Abstract Background Cachexia has significant impact on the patients' quality of life and prognosis. It is frequently observed in patients with cancer, especially in advanced stages, but prevalence data for the overall population are lacking. Good quality estimates of cancer cachexia in general and for each of the major cancer types would be highly relevant for potential treatment development efforts in this field. Both the USA and European Union (EU) have implemented special clinical development rules for such rare disorders what are called ‘orphan diseases’. The cut‐off level for a disease to be considered an orphan disease in the USA is 200 000 people (0.06% of the population) and EU is 5 per 10 000 people (0.05% of the population). Methods For this systematic review, we searched at PubMed (from inception to 31 January 2018) to identify clinical studies that assessed the prevalence of cachexia in cancer patients at risk. Studies reporting the prevalence of either cancer cachexia or wasting disease in the top‐10 cancer types and 4 other selected cancer types known to be particularly commonly complicated by cachexia were included in this analysis (i.e. prostate cancer, breast cancer, colorectal cancer, melanoma, endometrial cancer, thyroid cancer, urinary bladder cancer, non‐hodgkin lymphoma, lung cancer, kidney and renal pelvis cancer, head and neck cancer, gastric cancer, liver cancer, and pancreatic cancer). We calculated the current burden of cancer cachexia, disease by disease, in the USA and in the EU and compared them to the current guidelines for the definition of orphan disease status. Results We estimate that in 2014 in the USA, a total of 527 100 patients (16.5 subjects per 10 000 people of the total population), and in 2013 in the EU, a total of 800 300 patients (15.8 subjects per 10 000 people of the total population) suffered from cancer cachexia (of any kind). In the 14 separately analysed cancer types, the prevalence of cancer cachexia in the USA ranged between 11 300 (0.4/10 000, gastric cancer) and 92 000 patients (2.9/10 000, lung cancer) and in the EU between 14 300 (0.3/10 000, melanoma of the skin) and 150 100 (3.0/10 000, colorectal cancer). Conclusions The absolute number of patients affected by cancer cachexia in each cancer group is lower than the defined thresholds for orphan diseases in the USA and EU. Cancer cachexia in each subgroup separately should be considered an orphan disease.
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    Sarcopenia: A Time for Action. An SCWD Position Paper
    (2019)
    Bauer, Juergen
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    Morley, John E.
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    Schols, Annemie M.W.J.
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    Ferrucci, Luigi
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    Cruz‐Jentoft, Alfonso J.
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    Dent, Elsa
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    Baracos, Vickie E.
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    Crawford, Jeffrey A.
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    Doehner, Wolfram
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    Heymsfield, Steven B.
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    Jatoi, Aminah
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    Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar
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    Lainscak, Mitja
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    Landi, Francesco
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    Laviano, Alessandro
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    Mancuso, Michelangelo
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    Muscaritoli, Maurizio
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    Prado, Carla M.
    ;
    Strasser, Florian
    ;
    Haehling, Stephan  
    ;
    Coats, Andrew J.S.
    ;
    Anker, Stefan D.  

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