Details

UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology


UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology


UICC 9. Aufl.

von: Brian O'Sullivan, James D. Brierley, Anil D'Cruz, Martin Fey, Raphael E. Pollock, Jan Vermorken, Shao Hui Huang

157,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 13.07.2015
ISBN/EAN: 9781119013136
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 856

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Beschreibungen

<p>The <i>Manual of Clinical Oncology</i>, Ninth Edition, published with the International Union Against Cancer (UICC), provides a concise, accessible and feasible reference covering state of art multidisciplinary clinical oncology in order to meet the needs of clinicians caring for cancer patients throughout the world.</p> <p>Edited by world-renowned practising oncologists and written by key opinion leaders, this book contains authoritative and up-to-date information on cancer detection, diagnosis and treatment alongside topics such as survivorship, special populations and palliative care.</p> <p>Remodelled and revised for the ninth edition to provide practical information to oncology workers, the <i>UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology</i> is structured in two parts. Part 1 covers general principles of cancer diagnosis and management with additional attention to special settings in oncology, including supportive care and survivorship, and Part 2 covers site-specific multidisciplinary cancer management. The edition includes up-to-date summaries of all treatment modalities (medical, surgical and radiation) for all tumour sites. It also contains the latest TNM classifications outlined in the <i>TNM Classification of Malignant Tumours</i>.</p> <p>The ninth edition includes:<br /><br />Practical presentation with bullet points, tables, and flow charts intended to facilitate quick reference for day-to-day clinical practice in busy oncology environments, <br />Representation of multidisciplinary care for site specific management, <br />Evidence-based approaches to management, including specific treatment recommendations and investigations guided by clinical practice guidelines, <br />State of art evidence-based recommendations that take into consideration the lack of availability of certain medications or resources, as well as practice variations, in different and remote regions of the world, and <br />Contemporary topics on cancer treatment, such as cancer informatics, evidence levels, principles of prognostication, survivorship and cancer in pregnancy.</p> <p>Oncologists, oncologists-in-training, nurses working with cancer patients and other health professionals responsible for treating and caring for those with cancers will find the <i>UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology</i> an indispensable and comprehensive resource.</p>
<p>Foreword x</p> <p>Preface xi</p> <p>About the Editors xiii</p> <p>Contributors xvi</p> <p><b>PART 1 General principles of cancer diagnosis and management 1</b></p> <p><b>Principles of knowledge generation and translation</b></p> <p>1 – Cancer epidemiology 3</p> <p>2 – Levels of evidence, guidelines and standards 12</p> <p>3 – Prognosis and classification of cancer 23</p> <p>4 – Principles of cancer staging 34</p> <p>5 – Assessment of treatment outcome 40</p> <p>6 – Cancer informatics 53</p> <p><b>Principles of cancer diagnosis</b></p> <p>7 – Imaging 63</p> <p>8 – Pathology 83</p> <p><b>Principles of treatment</b></p> <p>9 – Principles of surgery 98</p> <p>10 – Principles of radiotherapy 108</p> <p>11 – Principles of systemic therapy 124</p> <p><b>Special settings, supportive care and survivorship</b></p> <p>12 – Treatment in pregnancy 134</p> <p>13 – Treatment in the elderly 139</p> <p>14 – Oncology emergencies 145</p> <p>15 – Supportive care during curative treatment 155</p> <p>16 – Pain management in cancer 168</p> <p>17 – Palliative care 174</p> <p>18 – Survivorship 184</p> <p>19 – Rehabilitation 194</p> <p><b>PART 2 Site-specific multidisciplinary cancer management 203</b></p> <p><b>Thoracic malignancies</b></p> <p>20 – Lung 205</p> <p><b>Breast</b></p> <p>21 – Breast 221</p> <p><b>Gastrointestinal malignancies</b></p> <p>22 – Liver 241</p> <p>23 – Biliary tract and pancreas 263</p> <p>23.1 – Biliary tract 263</p> <p>23.2 – Pancreas 270</p> <p>24 – Oesophagus 280</p> <p>25 – Stomach 297</p> <p>26 – Colon, rectum and anus 308</p> <p>26.1 – Colon and rectum 308</p> <p>26.2 – Anus 327</p> <p><b>Genitourinary malignancies</b></p> <p>27 – Prostate 333</p> <p>28 – Bladder and other urothelium 343</p> <p>29 – Kidney 354</p> <p>30 – Testicular germ cell tumours 368</p> <p>31 – Penis 384</p> <p><b>Haematological malignancies</b></p> <p>32 – Lymphoma 392</p> <p>33 – Myeloma 415</p> <p>34 – Leukaemia 427</p> <p><b>Gynaecological cancers</b></p> <p>35 – Cervix 449</p> <p>36 – Uterus 467</p> <p>37 – Ovary and fallopian tube 479</p> <p><b>Head and neck cancer</b></p> <p>39 – General principles of head and neck cancer management 503</p> <p>40 – Nasopharynx 512</p> <p>41 – Oral cavity 524</p> <p>42 – Larynx and hypopharynx 542</p> <p>43 – Oropharynx 559</p> <p>44 – Major salivary glands 571</p> <p>45 – Nasal cavity and paranasal sinus 586</p> <p>46 – Head and neck unknown primary 597</p> <p><b>Endocrine tumors</b></p> <p>47 – Pituitary 609</p> <p>48 – Thyroid 626</p> <p>49 – Adrenal tumours 641</p> <p>50 – Neuroendocrine tumours 656</p> <p><b>Dermatological cancer</b></p> <p>51 – Skin: Basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and Merkel cell carcinoma 674</p> <p>52 – Melanoma 689</p> <p><b>Central nervous system and ocular cancers</b></p> <p>53 – Central nervous system 706</p> <p>54 – Eye: Choroidal melanoma, retinoblastoma, ocular adnexal lymph</p> <p><b>Sarcoma</b></p> <p>55 – Bone (osteosarcoma) 745</p> <p>56 – Soft tissue 754</p> <p><b>Childhood malignancies</b></p> <p>57 – Paediatric tumors 768</p> <p><b>Specific cancer situations</b></p> <p>58 – Cancer of unknown primary (no 59 – HIV and transplant-related neoplasms 797</p> <p>59.1 – HIV-related neoplasms 797</p> <p>59.2 – Post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disease 809</p> <p>59.3 – Cancer following solid organ transplantation 812</p> <p>Index 815</p>
<p>Brian O’Sullivan, MD, FRCPC, FRCPI, FFRRCSI (Hon), FASTRO (Editor-in-Chief)</p> <p>Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology</p> <p>Bartley-Smith / Wharton Chair in Radiation Oncology</p> <p>Princess Margaret Cancer Centre / University of Toronto</p> <p>Toronto, Ontario, Canada</p> <p> </p> <p>James D Brierley, BSc, MB, FRCP, FRCR, FRCPC (Associate Editor)</p> <p>Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology</p> <p>Princess Margaret Cancer Centre / University of Toronto</p> <p>Toronto, Ontario, Canada</p> <p> </p> <p>Anil K. D’Cruz MS, DNB, FRCS (Associate Editor)</p> <p>Professor, Department of Head and Neck Surgical Oncology</p> <p>Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, India</p> <p> </p> <p>Martin F. Fey, MD (Associate Editor)</p> <p>Professor, Department of Medical Oncology</p> <p>Inselspital and University Hospital</p> <p>Bern, Switzerland</p> <p> </p> <p>Raphael Pollock, MD, PhD (Associate Editor)</p> <p>Director of Surgical Oncology, Chief of Surgical Services</p> <p>The James NCICCC/Ohio State University</p> <p>Columbus, OH, USA</p> <p> </p> <p>Jan B. Vermorken, MD, PhD (Associate Editor)</p> <p>Emeritus Professor of Oncology</p> <p>Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences,</p> <p>University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium</p> <p>Department of Medical Oncology</p> <p>Antwerp University Hospital</p> <p>Edegem, Belgium</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>Shao Hui Huang, MD, MSc, MRT(T) (Editorial coordinator)</p> <p>Assistant Professor</p> <p>Department of Radiation Oncology</p> <p>Princess Margaret Cancer Centre / University of Toronto</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>BIOGRAPHIES</p> <p><b>Brian O’Sullivan</b> is a Professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He also holds the Bartley-Smith/Wharton Distinguished Chair in Radiation Oncology in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University of Toronto. He is the Head and Neck Oncology Program Chair at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, the co-Chair of the US NCI Head and Neck Steering Committee, Coordinating Center for Clinical Trials, CTEP, and a full standing member of the Commission of the International Commission on Radiation Units (ICRU). He is the recipient of numerous international awards, and research grants.  He has published almost 300 peer reviewed papers, in excess of 50 book chapters, and has written or edited 6 oncology textbooks.  His interests include sarcoma and head and neck cancer, translational research, IMRT delivery and the principles of image guided radiotherapy, chemo-radiotherapy and molecular targeting. He is a member of the TNM Committee of the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC), Chair of the UICC Prognostic Classification Sub-Committee and represents the UICC as liaison in several oncology sites to the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC).</p> <p> </p> <p><b>James Brierley</b> is a Professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Toronto, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. He obtained his medical degree from Westminster Medical School, University of London. He initially did postgraduate training in Internal Medicine before transferring to Clinical Oncology. He is interested in the management of gastrointestinal malignancy and thyroid malignancy and cancer staging and surveillance. He has written extensively on thyroid cancer, the role of radiation in gastrointestinal malignancy and cancer staging and surveillance and is actively involved in research into the role of radiation in the management of gastrointestinal and endocrine malignancies and ensuring staging data is collected and used on a population basis. He is the previous head of the Gastrointestinal Site Group at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and is currently the Canadian Partnership Against; Cancer  Expert Lead, Staging and Surveillance. He is a Member of the AJCC Executive and Chair of the AJCC Education and Promotions Working Group,  Co-Chair of the UICC TNM Prognostic Factors Core Group and Co-Editor of the UICC 8th edition TNM Classification of Malignant Tumours.</p> <p> </p> <p><b>Anil D’Cruz</b> is Director at the Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, India as well as Professor& Surgeon, Department of Head & Neck Surgery.   He is a distinguished leader in the field of oncology and on the Board of Directors of the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC), Geneva, Foundation of Head Neck Oncology India and the Asian Society of Head Neck Oncology.. He has more than 150 peer-reviewed publications and chapters to his name and is also an editor for a two volume text book on Head and neck Surgery. He is Associate Editor of Head Neck Oncology Journal and member of the Editorial Board of many reputed national and international journals. He has delivered more than 250 invited lectures and 50 orations.</p> <p> </p> <p><b>Martin Fey</b> is a Professor and Head of Department of Medical Oncology at the University of Berne, Switzerland. He is also Head of the Department of Oncology, Laboratory medicine and Hospital Pharmacy at the Inselspital Bern. He received his medical degree from the Berne University Medical School. He was the recipient of Robert-Wenner Award of the Swiss Cancer League and Ellermann Award of the Swiss Society of Haematology. He has more than 250 peer-reviewed publications to his credit, mainly in clinical and experimental haematological oncology. He leads clinical trials in leukaemia, lymphoma, breast cancer and other types of tumours. He was the Chairman of the Leukaemia Group of the Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Re¬search (SAKK) from 1990-1995 and a Principal Investigator of the SAKK and the International Breast Cancer Study Group (IBCSG) from 1993-2002. His interests include leukaemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, and the design of clinical trials. He is a member of the Cantonal Ethics Committee for Clinical Trials of the Canton of Bern, Switzerland.</p> <p> </p> <p><b>Raphael Pollock,</b> M.D., Ph.D. was born in Chicago, Illinois and graduated from Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio in 1972. This was followed by medical school at the St. Louis University School of Medicine Chicago, IL residencies in General Surgery at the University of Chicago and Rush Medical College, a fellowship in Surgical Oncology at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, and a Ph.D. in Tumor Immunology from the Graduate School of the Biological Sciences at the University of Texas-Houston Health Sciences Center. Dr. Pollock joined the Department of Surgical Oncology at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center as a faculty member in 1984.  Dr. Pollock became Chairman of the Department of Surgical Oncology in 1993 and became Head of the Division of Surgery at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in 1997. In 2006-07 Dr. Pollock served as President of the Society of Surgical Oncology; from 1999-2011 he served as Editor-in-Chief of Cancer. In 2013 Dr. Pollock left MD Anderson to become Director and Professor, Division of Surgical Oncology and Chief of Surgical Services at The James Comprehensive Cancer Center at The Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio. Dr. Pollock serves as Director of the Sarcoma Research Laboratory at The Ohio State University Medical Center and is the Principal Investigator on behalf of the US NIH/NCI SARC Sarcoma SPORE grant program. Dr. Pollock is a member of the US NIH/NCI Board of Scientific Counselors.</p> <p> </p> <p><b>Jan B. Vermorken</b> was born in 1944,  graduated in 1970 from the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands and became a board-certified specialist in internal medicine in 1975. Since that time he has worked in the field of Medical Oncology and was officially registered as a Medical Oncologist in the Netherlands in 1992. He received his PhD in Medical Sciences in 1986 from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam.  From May 1997 until October 1, 2009, he was Professor of Oncology at the University of Antwerp (UA), and head of the Department of Medical Oncology at the University Hospital Antwerp (UZA), in Edegem, Belgium. After his retirement he remains connected to both University (emeritus Professor) and University Hospital.</p> <p>His main fields of interest are gynecologic oncology, and head and neck oncology. He devotes a significant amount of time to teaching, professional training, and continuing medical education.</p> Professor Vermorken is member of various scientific societies, is member of several editorial boards of International journals, reviewer multiple cancer journals and author or co-author of more than 500 publications in international journals. From January 1, 2009 until January 1, 2014 he was Editor-in-Chief of Annals of Oncology, the official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology and the Japanese Society of Medical Oncology. On March 1, 2013 he received the title of Commander in the Order of Leopold for his contributions to oncology.
<p>The <i>Manual of Clinical Oncology</i>, Ninth Edition, published with the International Union Against Cancer (UICC), provides a concise, accessible and feasible reference covering state of art multidisciplinary clinical oncology in order to meet the needs of clinicians caring for cancer patients throughout the world.</p> <p>Edited by world-renowned practising oncologists and written by key opinion leaders, this book contains authoritative and up-to-date information on cancer detection, diagnosis and treatment alongside topics such as survivorship, special populations and palliative care.</p> <p>Remodelled and revised for the ninth edition to provide practical information to oncology workers, the <i>UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology</i> is structured in two parts. Part 1 covers general principles of cancer diagnosis and management with additional attention to special settings in oncology, including supportive care and survivorship, and Part 2 covers site-specific multidisciplinary cancer management. The edition includes up-to-date summaries of all treatment modalities (medical, surgical and radiation) for all tumour sites. It also contains the latest TNM classifications outlined in the <i>TNM Classification of Malignant Tumours</i>.</p> <p>The ninth edition includes:<br /><br />Practical presentation with bullet points, tables, and flow charts intended to facilitate quick reference for day-to-day clinical practice in busy oncology environments, <br />Representation of multidisciplinary care for site specific management, <br />Evidence-based approaches to management, including specific treatment recommendations and investigations guided by clinical practice guidelines, <br />State of art evidence-based recommendations that take into consideration the lack of availability of certain medications or resources, as well as practice variations, in different and remote regions of the world, and <br />Contemporary topics on cancer treatment, such as cancer informatics, evidence levels, principles of prognostication, survivorship and cancer in pregnancy.</p> <p>Oncologists, oncologists-in-training, nurses working with cancer patients and other health professionals responsible for treating and caring for those with cancers will find the <i>UICC Manual of Clinical Oncology</i> an indispensable and comprehensive resource.</p>

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