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1.
Dev Sci ; : e13515, 2024 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38618899

RESUMO

Everyday caregiver-infant interactions are dynamic and multidimensional. However, existing research underestimates the dimensionality of infants' experiences, often focusing on one or two communicative signals (e.g., speech alone, or speech and gesture together). Here, we introduce "infant-directed communication" (IDC): the suite of communicative signals from caregivers to infants including speech, action, gesture, emotion, and touch. We recorded 10 min of at-home play between 44 caregivers and their 18- to 24-month-old infants from predominantly white, middle-class, English-speaking families in the United States. Interactions were coded for five dimensions of IDC as well as infants' gestures and vocalizations. Most caregivers used all five dimensions of IDC throughout the interaction, and these dimensions frequently overlapped. For example, over 60% of the speech that infants heard was accompanied by one or more non-verbal communicative cues. However, we saw marked variation across caregivers in their use of IDC, likely reflecting tailored communication to the behaviors and abilities of their infant. Moreover, caregivers systematically increased the dimensionality of IDC, using more overlapping cues in response to infant gestures and vocalizations, and more IDC with infants who had smaller vocabularies. Understanding how and when caregivers use all five signals-together and separately-in interactions with infants has the potential to redefine how developmental scientists conceive of infants' communicative environments, and enhance our understanding of the relations between caregiver input and early learning. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Infants' everyday interactions with caregivers are dynamic and multimodal, but existing research has underestimated the multidimensionality (i.e., the diversity of simultaneously occurring communicative cues) inherent in infant-directed communication. Over 60% of the speech that infants encounter during at-home, free play interactions overlap with one or more of a variety of non-speech communicative cues. The multidimensionality of caregivers' communicative cues increases in response to infants' gestures and vocalizations, providing new information about how infants' own behaviors shape their input. These findings emphasize the importance of understanding how caregivers use a diverse set of communicative behaviors-both separately and together-during everyday interactions with infants.

2.
Infancy ; 29(3): 302-326, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38217508

RESUMO

The valid assessment of vocabulary development in dual-language-learning infants is critical to developmental science. We developed the Dual Language Learners English-Spanish (DLL-ES) Inventories to measure vocabularies of U.S. English-Spanish DLLs. The inventories provide translation equivalents for all Spanish and English items on Communicative Development Inventory (CDI) short forms; extended inventories based on CDI long forms; and Spanish language-variety options. Item-Response Theory analyses applied to Wordbank and Web-CDI data (n = 2603, 12-18 months; n = 6722, 16-36 months; half female; 1% Asian, 3% Black, 2% Hispanic, 30% White, 64% unknown) showed near-perfect associations between DLL-ES and CDI long-form scores. Interviews with 10 Hispanic mothers of 18- to 24-month-olds (2 White, 1 Black, 7 multi-racial; 6 female) provide a proof of concept for the value of the DLL-ES for assessing the vocabularies of DLLs.


Assuntos
Citrus sinensis , Malus , Multilinguismo , Criança , Lactente , Humanos , Feminino , Vocabulário , Linguagem Infantil , Testes de Linguagem , Idioma
3.
Infant Child Dev ; 33(1)2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38389731

RESUMO

Descriptive developmental research seeks to document, describe, and analyze the conditions under which infants and children live and learn. Here, we articulate how open-science practices can be incorporated into descriptive research to increase its transparency, reliability, and replicability. To date, most open-science practices have been oriented toward experimental rather than descriptive studies, and it can be confusing to figure out how to translate open-science practices (e.g., preregistration) for research that is more descriptive in nature. We discuss a number of unique considerations for descriptive developmental research, taking inspiration from existing open-science practices and providing examples from recent and ongoing studies. By embracing a scientific culture where descriptive research and open science coexist productively, developmental science will be better positioned to generate comprehensive theories of development and understand variability in development across communities and cultures.

4.
Child Dev ; 94(3): 585-602, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36852506

RESUMO

Learning about emotions is an important part of children's social and communicative development. How does children's emotion-related vocabulary emerge over development? How may emotion-related information in caregiver input support learning of emotion labels and other emotion-related words? This investigation examined language production and input among English-speaking toddlers (16-30 months) using two datasets: Wordbank (N = 5520; 36% female, 38% male, and 26% unknown gender; 1% Asian, 4% Black, 2% Hispanic, 40% White, 2% others, and 50% unknown ethnicity; collected in North America; dates of data collection unknown) and Child Language Data Exchange System (N = 587; 46% female, 44% male, 9% unknown gender, all unknown ethnicity; collected in North America and the UK; data collection dates, were available between 1962 and 2009). First, we show that toddlers develop the vocabulary to express increasingly wide ranges of emotional information during the first 2 years of life. Computational measures of word valence showed that emotion labels are embedded in a rich network of words with related valence. Second, we show that caregivers leverage these semantic connections in ways that may scaffold children's learning of emotion and mental state labels. This research suggests that young children use the dynamics of language input to construct emotion word meanings, and provides new techniques for defining the quality of infant-directed speech.


Assuntos
Fala , Vocabulário , Lactente , Masculino , Humanos , Feminino , Pré-Escolar , Cuidadores/psicologia , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Emoções
5.
Infancy ; 28(3): 532-549, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36808682

RESUMO

Theories across cognitive domains propose that anticipating upcoming sensory input supports information processing. In line with this view, prior findings indicate that adults and children anticipate upcoming words during real-time language processing, via such processes as prediction and priming. However, it is unclear if anticipatory processes are strictly an outcome of prior language development or are more entwined with language learning and development. We operationalized this theoretical question as whether developmental emergence of comprehension of lexical items occurs before or concurrently with the anticipation of these lexical items. To this end, we tested infants of ages 12, 15, 18, and 24 months (N = 67) on their abilities to comprehend and anticipate familiar nouns. In an eye-tracking task, infants viewed pairs of images and heard sentences with either informative words (e.g., eat) that allowed them to anticipate an upcoming noun (e.g., cookie), or uninformative words (e.g., see). Findings indicated that infants' comprehension and anticipation abilities are closely linked over developmental time and within individuals. Importantly, we do not find evidence for lexical comprehension in the absence of lexical anticipation. Thus, anticipatory processes are present early in infants' second year, suggesting they are a part of language development rather than solely an outcome of it.


Assuntos
Compreensão , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Criança , Adulto , Humanos , Lactente , Idioma , Audição
6.
J Child Lang ; : 1-11, 2023 Jul 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37401467

RESUMO

We examined how noun frequency and the typicality of surrounding linguistic context contribute to children's real-time comprehension. Monolingual English-learning toddlers viewed pairs of pictures while hearing sentences with typical or atypical sentence frames (Look at the… vs. Examine the…), followed by nouns that were higher- or lower-frequency labels for a referent (horse vs. pony). Toddlers showed no significant differences in comprehension of nouns in typical and atypical sentence frames. However, they were less accurate in recognizing lower-frequency nouns, particularly among toddlers with smaller vocabularies. We conclude that toddlers can recognize nouns in diverse sentence contexts, but their representations develop gradually.

7.
Gynecol Oncol ; 166(3): 403-409, 2022 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35843739

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Phase I trial to determine the safety and efficacy of paclitaxel, sapanisertib, and serabelisib. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with previously treated advanced solid tumors were eligible for this open label, cohort study of sapanisertib (TAK-228) and serabelisib (TAK-117) with weekly paclitaxel. A traditional 3 + 3 dose escalation design with 5 dosing cohorts was used. Patient reported outcomes were also evaluated. RESULTS: 19 heavily pretreated patients were enrolled (10 ovarian, 3 breast, and 6 endometrial cancers). All patients received comprehensive genomic profiling prior to enrollment. RP2D is sapanisertib 3 or 4 mg, serabelisib 200 mg on days 2-4, 9-11, 16-18 and 23-25 with paclitaxel 80 mg/m2 on days 1, 8 and 15 every 28 days. All patients in Cohort 5 required dose reductions and one patient experienced a DLT. The most frequent grade 3 or 4 adverse events were decreased WBCs (20%), nonfebrile neutropenia (12%), anemia (9%), elevated liver enzymes (4%), and hyperglycemia (11%). 3 patients had a CR, 4 had a PR, and 4 patients had SD > six months. ORR was 47% and CBR was 73% in 15 evaluable patients. Including all 19 enrolled patients, the PFS was 11 months and OS is still ongoing at 17 months. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of sapanisertib, serabelisib, and paclitaxel was safe and generally well tolerated. Preliminary efficacy was remarkable in an area of unmet need, especially for patient with PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway aberrations. Positive effects and sustained clinical benefit were even seen in patients that were refractory to platinum and had failed taxane, everolimus, or temsirolimus. CLINICAL TRIAL NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03154294.


Assuntos
Neoplasias , Paclitaxel , Adenina/análogos & derivados , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/efeitos adversos , Benzoxazóis , Estudos de Coortes , Humanos , Imidazóis , Morfolinas , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases , Piridinas , Serina-Treonina Quinases TOR
8.
Infancy ; 27(4): 765-779, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35416378

RESUMO

Infants' looking behaviors are often used for measuring attention, real-time processing, and learning-often using low-resolution videos. Despite the ubiquity of gaze-related methods in developmental science, current analysis techniques usually involve laborious post hoc coding, imprecise real-time coding, or expensive eye trackers that may increase data loss and require a calibration phase. As an alternative, we propose using computer vision methods to perform automatic gaze estimation from low-resolution videos. At the core of our approach is a neural network that classifies gaze directions in real time. We compared our method, called iCatcher, to manually annotated videos from a prior study in which infants looked at one of two pictures on a screen. We demonstrated that the accuracy of iCatcher approximates that of human annotators and that it replicates the prior study's results. Our method is publicly available as an open-source repository at https://github.com/yoterel/iCatcher.


Assuntos
Movimentos Oculares , Redes Neurais de Computação , Atenção , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Humanos , Lactente , Aprendizagem
9.
Behav Brain Sci ; 45: e35, 2022 02 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35139960

RESUMO

Yarkoni's analysis clearly articulates a number of concerns limiting the generalizability and explanatory power of psychological findings, many of which are compounded in infancy research. ManyBabies addresses these concerns via a radically collaborative, large-scale and open approach to research that is grounded in theory-building, committed to diversification, and focused on understanding sources of variation.


Assuntos
Humanos , Lactente
10.
Curr Opin Oncol ; 33(5): 507-512, 2021 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34183492

RESUMO

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We are in an exhilarating time in which innovations exist to help reduce the impact of cancer for individuals, practitioners and society. Innovative tools in cancer genomics can optimize decision-making concerning appropriate drugs (alone or in combination) to cure or prolong life. The genomic characterization of tumours can also give direction to the development of novel drugs. Next-generation tumour sequencing is increasingly becoming an essential part of clinical decision-making, and, as such, will require appropriate coordination for effective adoption and delivery. RECENT FINDINGS: There are several challenges that will need to be addressed if we are to facilitate cancer genomics as part of routine community oncology practice. Recent research into this novel testing paradigm has demonstrated the barriers are at the individual level, while others are at the institution and societal levels. SUMMARY: This article, based on the authors' experience in community oncology practice and summary of literature, describes these challenges so strategies can be developed to address these challenges to improve patient outcomes.


Assuntos
Oncologia , Neoplasias , Genômica , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Humanos , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/genética
11.
Dev Sci ; 24(1): e12997, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32441385

RESUMO

Young children have an overall preference for child-directed speech (CDS) over adult-directed speech (ADS), and its structural features are thought to facilitate language learning. Many studies have supported these findings, but less is known about processing of CDS at short, sub-second timescales. How do the moment-to-moment dynamics of CDS influence young children's attention and learning? In Study 1, we used hierarchical clustering to characterize patterns of pitch variability in a natural CDS corpus, which uncovered four main word-level contour shapes: 'fall', 'rise', 'hill', and 'valley'. In Study 2, we adapted a measure from adult attention research-pupil size synchrony-to quantify real-time attention to speech across participants, and found that toddlers showed higher synchrony to the dynamics of CDS than to ADS. Importantly, there were consistent differences in toddlers' attention when listening to the four word-level contour types. In Study 3, we found that pupil size synchrony during exposure to novel words predicted toddlers' learning at test. This suggests that the dynamics of pitch in CDS not only shape toddlers' attention but guide their learning of new words. By revealing a physiological response to the real-time dynamics of CDS, this investigation yields a new sub-second framework for understanding young children's engagement with one of the most important signals in their environment.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Fala , Adulto , Pré-Escolar , Compreensão , Família , Humanos , Aprendizagem
12.
Infancy ; 26(6): 1037-1056, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34482624

RESUMO

The ability to differentiate between two languages sets the stage for bilingual learning. Infants can discriminate languages when hearing long passages, but language switches often occur on short time scales with few cues to language identity. As bilingual infants begin learning sequences of sounds and words, how do they detect the dynamics of two languages? In two studies using the head-turn preference procedure, we investigated whether infants (n = 44) can discriminate languages at the level of individual words. In Study 1, bilingual and monolingual 8- to 12-month-olds were tested on their detection of single-word language switching in lists of words (e.g., "dog… lait [fr. milk]"). In Study 2, they were tested on language switching within sentences (e.g., "Do you like the lait?"). We found that infants were unable to detect language switching in lists of words, but the results were inconclusive about infants' ability to detect language switching within sentences. No differences were observed between bilinguals and monolinguals. Given that bilingual proficiency eventually requires detection of sound sequences across two languages, more research will be needed to conclusively understand when and how this skill emerges. Materials, data, and analysis scripts are available at https://osf.io/9dtwn/.


Assuntos
Multilinguismo , Percepção da Fala , Humanos , Lactente , Idioma , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Aprendizagem
13.
Infancy ; 26(1): 4-38, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33306867

RESUMO

Determining the meanings of words requires language learners to attend to what other people say. However, it behooves a young language learner to simultaneously encode relevant non-verbal cues, for example, by following the direction of their eye gaze. Sensitivity to cues such as eye gaze might be particularly important for bilingual infants, as they encounter less consistency between words and objects than monolingual infants, and do not always have access to the same word-learning heuristics (e.g., mutual exclusivity). In a preregistered study, we tested the hypothesis that bilingual experience would lead to a more pronounced ability to follow another's gaze. We used a gaze-following paradigm developed by Senju and Csibra (Current Biology, 18, 2008, 668) to test a total of 93 6- to 9-month-old and 229 12- to 15-month-old monolingual and bilingual infants, in 11 laboratories located in 8 countries. Monolingual and bilingual infants showed similar gaze-following abilities, and both groups showed age-related improvements in speed, accuracy, frequency, and duration of fixations to congruent objects. Unexpectedly, bilinguals tended to make more frequent fixations to on-screen objects, whether or not they were cued by the actor. These results suggest that gaze sensitivity is a fundamental aspect of development that is robust to variation in language exposure.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento Infantil/fisiologia , Movimentos Oculares/fisiologia , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Multilinguismo , Percepção Social , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Tecnologia de Rastreamento Ocular , Feminino , Fixação Ocular/fisiologia , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino
14.
Psychol Sci ; 31(1): 6-17, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31845827

RESUMO

Infancy is the foundational period for learning from adults, and the dynamics of the social environment have long been considered central to children's development. Here, we reveal a novel, naturalistic approach for studying live interactions between infants and adults. Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), we simultaneously and continuously measured the brains of infants (N = 18; 9-15 months of age) and an adult while they communicated and played with each other. We found that time-locked neural coupling within dyads was significantly greater when dyad members interacted with each other than with control individuals. In addition, we characterized the dynamic relationship between neural activation and the moment-to-moment fluctuations of mutual gaze, joint attention to objects, infant emotion, and adult speech prosody. This investigation advances what is currently known about how the brains and behaviors of infants both shape and reflect those of adults during real-life communication.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/fisiologia , Fixação Ocular , Comunicação não Verbal , Percepção da Fala , Adulto , Encéfalo/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Idioma , Masculino , Espectroscopia de Luz Próxima ao Infravermelho
15.
Child Dev ; 91(1): e29-e41, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30516268

RESUMO

When referring to objects, adults package words, sentences, and gestures in ways that shape children's learning. Here, to understand how continuity of reference shapes word learning, an adult taught new words to 4-year-old children (N = 120) using either clusters of references to the same object or no sequential references to each object. In three experiments, the adult used a combination of labels and other object references, which provided informative discourse (e.g., This is small and green), neutral discourse (e.g., This is really great), or no verbal discourse. Switching verbal references from one object to another interfered with learning relative to providing clustered references to a particular object, revealing that discontinuity in discourse hinders children's encoding of new words.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Aprendizagem Verbal , Adulto , Análise de Variância , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Gestos , Humanos , Masculino
16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(34): 9032-9037, 2017 08 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28784802

RESUMO

Infants growing up in bilingual homes learn two languages simultaneously without apparent confusion or delay. However, the mechanisms that support this remarkable achievement remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that infants use language-control mechanisms to preferentially activate the currently heard language during listening. In a naturalistic eye-tracking procedure, bilingual infants were more accurate at recognizing objects labeled in same-language sentences ("Find the dog!") than in switched-language sentences ("Find the chien!"). Measurements of infants' pupil size over time indicated that this resulted from increased cognitive load during language switches. However, language switches did not always engender processing difficulties: the switch cost was reduced or eliminated when the switch was from the nondominant to the dominant language, and when it crossed a sentence boundary. Adults showed the same patterns of performance as infants, even though target words were simple and highly familiar. Our results provide striking evidence from infancy to adulthood that bilinguals monitor their languages for efficient comprehension. Everyday practice controlling two languages during listening is likely to explain previously observed bilingual cognitive advantages across the lifespan.


Assuntos
Percepção Auditiva/fisiologia , Compreensão/fisiologia , Audição/fisiologia , Multilinguismo , Estimulação Acústica , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Estimulação Luminosa , Pupila/fisiologia , Tempo de Reação/fisiologia , Percepção da Fala/fisiologia , Percepção Visual/fisiologia
17.
Can Psychol ; 61(4): 349-363, 2020 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34219905

RESUMO

The field of infancy research faces a difficult challenge: some questions require samples that are simply too large for any one lab to recruit and test. ManyBabies aims to address this problem by forming large-scale collaborations on key theoretical questions in developmental science, while promoting the uptake of Open Science practices. Here, we look back on the first project completed under the ManyBabies umbrella - ManyBabies 1 - which tested the development of infant-directed speech preference. Our goal is to share the lessons learned over the course of the project and to articulate our vision for the role of large-scale collaborations in the field. First, we consider the decisions made in scaling up experimental research for a collaboration involving 100+ researchers and 70+ labs. Next, we discuss successes and challenges over the course of the project, including: protocol design and implementation, data analysis, organizational structures and collaborative workflows, securing funding, and encouraging broad participation in the project. Finally, we discuss the benefits we see both in ongoing ManyBabies projects and in future large-scale collaborations in general, with a particular eye towards developing best practices and increasing growth and diversity in infancy research and psychological science in general. Throughout the paper, we include first-hand narrative experiences, in order to illustrate the perspectives of researchers playing different roles within the project. While this project focused on the unique challenges of infant research, many of the insights we gained can be applied to large-scale collaborations across the broader field of psychology.

18.
Dev Sci ; 22(1): e12704, 2019 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30014590

RESUMO

Everyone agrees that infants possess general mechanisms for learning about the world, but the existence and operation of more specialized mechanisms is controversial. One mechanism-rule learning-has been proposed as potentially specific to speech, based on findings that 7-month-olds can learn abstract repetition rules from spoken syllables (e.g. ABB patterns: wo-fe-fe, ga-tu-tu…) but not from closely matched stimuli, such as tones. Subsequent work has shown that learning of abstract patterns is not simply specific to speech. However, we still lack a parsimonious explanation to tie together the diverse, messy, and occasionally contradictory findings in that literature. We took two routes to creating a new profile of rule learning: meta-analysis of 20 prior reports on infants' learning of abstract repetition rules (including 1,318 infants in 63 experiments total), and an experiment on learning of such rules from a natural, non-speech communicative signal. These complementary approaches revealed that infants were most likely to learn abstract patterns from meaningful stimuli. We argue that the ability to detect and generalize simple patterns supports learning across domains in infancy but chiefly when the signal is meaningfully relevant to infants' experience with sounds, objects, language, and people.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento Infantil , Aprendizagem , Comunicação , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Idioma , Masculino , Som , Fala
19.
Dev Sci ; 22(4): e12794, 2019 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30582256

RESUMO

In bilingual language environments, infants and toddlers listen to two separate languages during the same key years that monolingual children listen to just one and bilinguals rarely learn each of their two languages at the same rate. Learning to understand language requires them to cope with challenges not found in monolingual input, notably the use of two languages within the same utterance (e.g., Do you like the perro? or ¿Te gusta el doggy?). For bilinguals of all ages, switching between two languages can reduce the efficiency in real-time language processing. But language switching is a dynamic phenomenon in bilingual environments, presenting the young learner with many junctures where comprehension can be derailed or even supported. In this study, we tested 20 Spanish-English bilingual toddlers (18- to 30-months) who varied substantially in language dominance. Toddlers' eye movements were monitored as they looked at familiar objects and listened to single-language and mixed-language sentences in both of their languages. We found asymmetrical switch costs when toddlers were tested in their dominant versus non-dominant language, and critically, they benefited from hearing nouns produced in their dominant language, independent of switching. While bilingualism does present unique challenges, our results suggest a united picture of early monolingual and bilingual learning. Just like monolinguals, experience shapes bilingual toddlers' word knowledge, and with more robust representations, toddlers are better able to recognize words in diverse sentences.


Assuntos
Percepção Auditiva/fisiologia , Compreensão/fisiologia , Movimentos Oculares/fisiologia , Desenvolvimento da Linguagem , Multilinguismo , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Idioma , Aprendizagem , Masculino
20.
Support Care Cancer ; 26(4): 1273-1279, 2018 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29090385

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) causes significant morbidity among colorectal cancer patients, receiving fluorouracil, oxaliplatin, and leucovorin (FOLFOX) chemotherapy even with standard antiemetic prophylaxis. The purpose of this study is to determine if the addition of aprepitant to standard antiemetic therapy improves CINV in these patients. METHODS: Patients receiving FOLFOX for colorectal cancer were given antiemetic prophylaxis with aprepitant 125 mg orally on day 1 and 80 mg on days 2 and 3. Palonosetron 0.25 mg was given IV push on day 1 only. Dexamethasone 12 mg was administered orally on day 1 and 8 mg each morning on days 2 through 4. Assessments including emetic events, rescue doses, nutritional intake, and appetite were recorded in a patient diary which was returned to study personnel in the following cycle. RESULTS: Of the 53 patients screened, 50 were evaluable and had a complete dataset for cycle 1. For the first cycle, 74% of patients achieved a complete response (CR), 22% achieved a major response and 4% experienced treatment failure. The percentage of patients achieving a CR remained high throughout each cycle at 83, 83, and 86% for cycles 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Appetite and nutritional status remained largely unchanged throughout treatment. Adverse events occurring in more than 10% of patients included diarrhea (13.6%), fatigue (12.6%), and neutropenia (11%). CONCLUSIONS: Aprepitant added to standard antiemetic therapy appears to be an effective and safe regimen for prevention of CINV in patients receiving FOLFOX.


Assuntos
Antieméticos/uso terapêutico , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/efeitos adversos , Neoplasias Colorretais/tratamento farmacológico , Náusea/prevenção & controle , Vômito/prevenção & controle , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/administração & dosagem , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/uso terapêutico , Aprepitanto/uso terapêutico , Dexametasona/uso terapêutico , Feminino , Fluoruracila/administração & dosagem , Fluoruracila/efeitos adversos , Humanos , Quimioterapia de Indução , Leucovorina/administração & dosagem , Leucovorina/efeitos adversos , Leucovorina/uso terapêutico , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Morfolinas/uso terapêutico , Náusea/induzido quimicamente , Compostos Organoplatínicos/administração & dosagem , Compostos Organoplatínicos/efeitos adversos , Palonossetrom/uso terapêutico , Projetos Piloto , Vômito/induzido quimicamente
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