Abstract Background Currently the majority of cancer patients are considered ineligible for intensive care treatment and oncologists are struggling to get their patients admitted to intensive care units. Critical care and oncology are frequently two separate worlds that communicate rarely and thus do not share novel developments in their fields. However, cancer medicine is rapidly improving and cancer is eventually becoming a chronic disease. Oncology is therefore characterized by a growing number of older and medically unfit patients that receive numerous novel drug classes with unexpected side effects. Discussion All of these changes will generate more medically challenging patients in acute distress that need to be considered for intensi...
to improved short- and long-term prognosis of cancer patients but admission to the intensive care un...
To respond to the legitimate questions raised by the application of invasive methods of monitoring a...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...
The increasing prevalence of patients living with cancer in conjunction with the rapid progress in c...
Malignancies are becoming increasingly common, especially as the population ages, and patients with ...
According to the American Cancer Society, more than 1.6 million people will be diagnosed with cancer...
Intensive care is becoming more and more important in the management of cancer patients and major ca...
Malignancies are becoming increasingly common, especially as the population ages, and patients with ...
Intensivists often refuse admission to cancer patients needing critical care, which may result in de...
Over the coming years, accelerating progress against cancer will be associated with an increased num...
International audienceImprovements in living conditions and increasing life expectancy have combined...
Introduction: The management of patients with cancer, presenting an immediate life-threatening risk ...
A few decades have passed since intensive care unit (ICU) beds have been available for critically il...
Over the last 15 years, the management of critically ill cancer patients requiring intensive care un...
International audiencePURPOSE OF REVIEW: In the 1990s, cancer patients were described as poor candid...
to improved short- and long-term prognosis of cancer patients but admission to the intensive care un...
To respond to the legitimate questions raised by the application of invasive methods of monitoring a...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...
The increasing prevalence of patients living with cancer in conjunction with the rapid progress in c...
Malignancies are becoming increasingly common, especially as the population ages, and patients with ...
According to the American Cancer Society, more than 1.6 million people will be diagnosed with cancer...
Intensive care is becoming more and more important in the management of cancer patients and major ca...
Malignancies are becoming increasingly common, especially as the population ages, and patients with ...
Intensivists often refuse admission to cancer patients needing critical care, which may result in de...
Over the coming years, accelerating progress against cancer will be associated with an increased num...
International audienceImprovements in living conditions and increasing life expectancy have combined...
Introduction: The management of patients with cancer, presenting an immediate life-threatening risk ...
A few decades have passed since intensive care unit (ICU) beds have been available for critically il...
Over the last 15 years, the management of critically ill cancer patients requiring intensive care un...
International audiencePURPOSE OF REVIEW: In the 1990s, cancer patients were described as poor candid...
to improved short- and long-term prognosis of cancer patients but admission to the intensive care un...
To respond to the legitimate questions raised by the application of invasive methods of monitoring a...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...