ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: Craniopharyngiomas are extremely rare (incidence rate of 1.34 per million). Due to its proximity to the sellar/suprasellar prefrontal regions region, cognitive impairment, behavioral changes, and adverse endocrinological outcomes are common. Further, surgery and radiotherapy can further impact functioning. Currently, there is no parsimonious cognitive profile of adult patients following interventions. This case highlights the role of neuropsychological evaluations in monitoring global psychological functioning and frontal behavioral syndrome in an adult with recurrent craniopharyngioma.
METHOD: The patient is a 39-year-old Black female first evaluated as an inpatient prior to resection surgery. She was evaluated on four additional times post-surgically. At the most recent evaluation, she and her family reported memory problems, apathy, and gait instability. Complicating factors included hypothyroidism, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, obstructive sleep apnea, pulmonary embolism, hypotension, COVID-19, and recurrent tachycardia, with inconsistent adherence to treatment recommendations.
RESULTS: She displayed global cognitive deficits two years post-surgery, particularly in language and memory. Neurobehaviorally, she exhibited pervasive signs of severe frontal lobe syndrome, including, abulia, hypophonic and dysarthric speech, psychomotor retardation, bradyphrenia, and anosognosia.
CONCLUSION: Neuropsychological evaluations remain critical in monitoring the patient's neurocognitive status and provide valuable insights into treatment planning and need for additional support and care to optimize patients' quality of life in the context of significant cognitive disability.
PMID:37807245 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acad067.136
19:51
PubMed articles on: Cancer & VTE/PE
Venous thromboembolism prevention in cancer care: implementation strategies to address underuse
Res Pract Thromb Haemost. 2023 Aug 20;7(7):102173. doi: 10.1016/j.rpth.2023.102173. eCollection 2023 Oct.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Evidenced-based interventions have been developed to prevent venous thromboembolism (VTE) in ambulatory patients with cancer, including VTE-risk assessment for all patients and targeted primary thromboprophylaxis for high-risk patients. Despite supportive evidence and recommendations, oncologists rarely assess VTE risk or provide primary prophylaxis. Our previous work identified barriers and facilitators to using VTE prevention interventions in oncology practice.
OBJECTIVES: To identify potential strategies that address the identified barriers and leverage facilitators to achieve successful implementation of evidence-based interventions for VTE prevention in oncology practice.
METHODS: We used the Implementation Research Logic Model, an implementation science framework, to map the relationships among barriers and facilitators, feasible and effective implementation strategies, and implementation and clinical outcomes that will be used to evaluate the implementation strategies.
RESULTS: We identified 12 discrete implementation strategies (eg, conducting clinician education and training and staged implementation scale-up) that address barriers and leverage facilitators through their mechanisms of action (eg, increased clinician awareness of evidence and targeting the highest effectiveness). We identified key implementation (eg, penetration, adoption, acceptability, fidelity, appropriateness, and sustainability), system (eg, integration of VTE-risk assessment into clinical workflow), and clinical (eg, lower VTE rates) outcomes targeted by the selected strategies.
CONCLUSION: Using the Implementation Research Logic Model framework and building on our knowledge of barriers and facilitators, we identified implementation strategies and important outcomes to evaluate these strategies. We will use these results to test and measure the strategies to improve the uptake of evidence-based recommendations for VTE prevention in oncology practice.
PMID:37822563 | PMC:PMC10562910 | DOI:10.1016/j.rpth.2023.102173
19:51
PubMed articles on: Cancer & VTE/PE
Persistent underuse of extended venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in patients undergoing major abdominal cancer operations
J Surg Oncol. 2023 Oct 6. doi: 10.1002/jso.27473. Online ahead of print.
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