International audienceThe applicability and efficacy of a scalp cooling system were studied in 105 breast cancer patients receiving four cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy with mitoxantrone + cyclophosphamide (NC chemotherapy). Women accepting the scalp-cooling system were compared for alopecia both against those who refused and against a "reference" group of 109 patients similarly treated but without being offered a scalp-cooling system. Hair loss in the 105 study patients was evaluated by nurses using World Health Organization (WHO) criteria at each cycle of chemotherapy. Concomitantly, tolerance and side-effects of the helmet were also recorded in 48 accepting patients. Similarly to reference group patients, a subsample of 27 accepting pati...
One side-effect of oncological treatment is chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA), a temporary form of...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVES: The success of scalp cooling in preventing or reducing che...
Title: Manual scalp cooling in early stage breast cancer: value of caretaker training and patient-re...
International audienceThe applicability and efficacy of a scalp cooling system were studied in 105 b...
BACKGROUND: Scalp cooling has been shown in several studies to be an effective method in preventing ...
Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) affects the majority of patients receiving chemotherapy (CT) for...
ImportanceChemotherapy-induced alopecia is a common and distressing adverse effect. In previous stud...
Background: Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) is a distressing side effect of cancer therapy. The ...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Introduction: Hair loss as a result of chemotherapy for early breast cancer (EBC...
PurposeThe risk of scalp metastases in patients using scalp cooling for preservation of hair during ...
Background: Chemotherapy-induced temporary hair loss is one of the most common and distressing side-...
11noBackground: In order to counter the alopeciatic effect of some chemotherapies (CT), oncology cen...
Introduction Cytotoxic therapy for patients with cancer frequently induces reversible, but long-last...
Objective: Scalp cooling (SC) is applied to reduce chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA). The aim of t...
Background: The DigniCap System is an effective scalp cooling device for the prevention of chemother...
One side-effect of oncological treatment is chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA), a temporary form of...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVES: The success of scalp cooling in preventing or reducing che...
Title: Manual scalp cooling in early stage breast cancer: value of caretaker training and patient-re...
International audienceThe applicability and efficacy of a scalp cooling system were studied in 105 b...
BACKGROUND: Scalp cooling has been shown in several studies to be an effective method in preventing ...
Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) affects the majority of patients receiving chemotherapy (CT) for...
ImportanceChemotherapy-induced alopecia is a common and distressing adverse effect. In previous stud...
Background: Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) is a distressing side effect of cancer therapy. The ...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Introduction: Hair loss as a result of chemotherapy for early breast cancer (EBC...
PurposeThe risk of scalp metastases in patients using scalp cooling for preservation of hair during ...
Background: Chemotherapy-induced temporary hair loss is one of the most common and distressing side-...
11noBackground: In order to counter the alopeciatic effect of some chemotherapies (CT), oncology cen...
Introduction Cytotoxic therapy for patients with cancer frequently induces reversible, but long-last...
Objective: Scalp cooling (SC) is applied to reduce chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA). The aim of t...
Background: The DigniCap System is an effective scalp cooling device for the prevention of chemother...
One side-effect of oncological treatment is chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA), a temporary form of...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVES: The success of scalp cooling in preventing or reducing che...
Title: Manual scalp cooling in early stage breast cancer: value of caretaker training and patient-re...