O'Mara Ann
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, 6130 Executive Blvd., EPN 2010, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
J Pediatr Oncol Nurs. 2006 Sep-Oct;23(5):258-60. doi: 10.1177/1043454206291360.
The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions to ameliorate cancer- and treatment-related toxicities is gaining increasing attention among clinical investigators. The National Cancer Institute supports a number of clinical studies, both descriptive and interventional, of CAM interventions across the cancer trajectory, from prevention through diagnosis and treatment, survivorship, and end of life. This report highlights the unique challenges that clinical investigators face when designing and implementing CAM clinical trials through the cooperative groups. This report focuses on 2 CAM trials that opened and accrued participants in the Children's Oncology Group. One trial is aimed at preventing or reducing mucositis and the other at preventing chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting.
使用补充和替代医学(CAM)干预措施来改善癌症及治疗相关毒性,正日益受到临床研究人员的关注。美国国立癌症研究所支持多项关于CAM干预措施在癌症全程(从预防到诊断、治疗、生存及生命末期)的描述性和干预性临床研究。本报告强调了临床研究人员在通过协作组设计和实施CAM临床试验时所面临的独特挑战。本报告重点关注两项在儿童肿瘤协作组开展并招募参与者的CAM试验。一项试验旨在预防或减轻粘膜炎,另一项旨在预防化疗引起的恶心和呕吐。