There is evidence that elderly cancer patients are often inappropriately treated because of their age. This is usually because of concerns that aged patients can not eliminate drugs as well as the young and, as a result, could end up being overdosed. Some drugs are removed from the body through the urine and adjusting for decreased kidney function (which often decreases with age) means that adequate doses can be calculated. However, many anti-cancer drugs are removed from the body by being broke ....There is evidence that elderly cancer patients are often inappropriately treated because of their age. This is usually because of concerns that aged patients can not eliminate drugs as well as the young and, as a result, could end up being overdosed. Some drugs are removed from the body through the urine and adjusting for decreased kidney function (which often decreases with age) means that adequate doses can be calculated. However, many anti-cancer drugs are removed from the body by being broken down (or metabolised) in the liver. The rate of this process is very difficult to estimate. Although many studies have shown that liver drug metabolism is decreased with age, it is unclear whether this is due strictly to age itself or some of the conditions which accompany ageing. We aim to study the removal of anti-cancer drugs in patients treated for cancer to see what the effects of ageing are. We will estimate the extent of liver breakdown and examine whether it is a function of age or rather of several factors which are often associated with age such as inflammation, reduced nutritional status and other medical conditions. The optimal outcome of the study will be methods for correctly adjusting the dose of anticancer drugs for maximal benefit to the elderly patient.Read moreRead less
This project will improve our understanding of how painkiller medicines work in very old and frail people which will improve the use of these medicines in pain management. This study will carefully examine pain control with two of the most commonly used pain killer medicines - paracetamol and oxycodone. By understanding all the factors that influence an older persons pain control we will be able to improve the safe and effective use of painkiller medicines in this special group of people.
Validating And Optimising The Analysis Of Magnetic Resonance Physiology Data
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$91,725.00
Summary
Combined electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is used to detect the anatomical areas in the brain that show electrical activity. Several centres worldwide use this technique to localise the seizure focus in patients with epilepsy. However, there is a lack of validation of the currently applied techniques. Current analysis methods have been developed and validated for other fMRI paradigms, such as motor tasks. It is not known whether the same principles ar ....Combined electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is used to detect the anatomical areas in the brain that show electrical activity. Several centres worldwide use this technique to localise the seizure focus in patients with epilepsy. However, there is a lack of validation of the currently applied techniques. Current analysis methods have been developed and validated for other fMRI paradigms, such as motor tasks. It is not known whether the same principles are applicable and optimal for fMRI-EEG data. The proposed project aims at validating and optimising the analysis strategies for fMRI-EEG data.Read moreRead less
Drugs are applied to the skin for the treatment of a wide range of conditions including both local (inflammation, pain, eczema, psoriasis) and systemic (angina, nicotine withdrawl, hormone replacement therapy) therapies. Unwanted skin absorption also occurs following exposure to environmental and occupational chemicals, including those applied deliberately to the skin such as insectisides, sunscreens and cosmetics. This study seeks to examine the relationship between the chemical structure of ag ....Drugs are applied to the skin for the treatment of a wide range of conditions including both local (inflammation, pain, eczema, psoriasis) and systemic (angina, nicotine withdrawl, hormone replacement therapy) therapies. Unwanted skin absorption also occurs following exposure to environmental and occupational chemicals, including those applied deliberately to the skin such as insectisides, sunscreens and cosmetics. This study seeks to examine the relationship between the chemical structure of agents, the types of formulations in which they are applied and their penetration into the various layers of the skin and underlying tissues. We intend to further our research into important areas relating to the ability to predict the likely behaviour of a solute which comes into contact with the skin from the aspect of optimising both topical drug delivery systems and risk assessment procedures. We will also be examining techniques of facilitating drug transport through the skin using (i) the knowledge gained of the mechanisms by which vehicles act on the skin, (ii) the synthesis of ester and amide lipophilic prodrugs and (iii) physical techniques such as iontophoresis, whereby small electrical currents are applied to charged drug species on the outside of the skin.Read moreRead less
Self-limiting Anti-inflammatory Actions Of Glucocorticoids In Asthma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$377,036.00
Summary
Asthma is a disease characterised by excessive narrowing of the airway tubes resulting in difficulty exhaling air from the lungs. Symptoms of asthma include coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath and difficulty in breathing. Asthma affects almost 1 in 5 Australians and is especially prevelant in children. One in every three Australians will suffer from symptoms of asthma at some time in their life and despite current therapy, asthma is responsible for the deaths of more than 700 Australians eve ....Asthma is a disease characterised by excessive narrowing of the airway tubes resulting in difficulty exhaling air from the lungs. Symptoms of asthma include coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath and difficulty in breathing. Asthma affects almost 1 in 5 Australians and is especially prevelant in children. One in every three Australians will suffer from symptoms of asthma at some time in their life and despite current therapy, asthma is responsible for the deaths of more than 700 Australians every year. Airway tubes of asthmatics have more and larger contractile muscle cells lining the tubes. This increase in muscle mass results from chemicals that are released from white blood cells that migrate into the airway tubes during and after asthma attacks. This thickening slows airflow through the airway tubes because the muscle mass bulges into the holes of the tubes and when the muscle shortens the total diameter of the tubes decrease. We have recently shown that steroids used by asthmatics to treat the white blood cell contribution to the disease can reduce the growth of airway muscle. However, when the muscle has been pretreated with factors that are present in the inflamed airway, the anti-growth effects of steroids are prevented. This effect of the steroids is due to reduced production of a substance called prostaglandin E2 which can also reduce the growth of muscle. Thus, whilst steroids may help in treating some of the symptoms of asthma, they may be suboptimal in the treatment of muscle thickening and other aspects of the disease which involve cell division and multiplication. Our specific question in the next phase of this research is whether steroid inhibition of the release of prostaglandins compromises the useful actions of steroids on the growth of the airway tubes. The findings of this proposed study will provide new information on the role of steroids in asthma and may lead to better therapeutic strategies for the treatment of severe asthma.Read moreRead less
Drinking Patterns, Gender And Social Roles In Alcohol Problems In Victoria, In An International Comparative Context
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$342,239.00
Summary
The varied impacts of drinking in the family and other gendered relations are an important and understudied aspect of alcohol studies, with general social and policy implications. The proposed research will make an important contribution to developing quantitative research in this area in Australia. The project uses concepts and measures which are novel in an Australian environment, and the international comparative aspect of the project, with comparable questionnaires in a wide diversity of soc ....The varied impacts of drinking in the family and other gendered relations are an important and understudied aspect of alcohol studies, with general social and policy implications. The proposed research will make an important contribution to developing quantitative research in this area in Australia. The project uses concepts and measures which are novel in an Australian environment, and the international comparative aspect of the project, with comparable questionnaires in a wide diversity of societies, is novel and innovative for the alcohol research field in general. Measures of social problems from drinking, and particularly and family and relationship, developed in analysing the study material will be made more broadly available for use in future studies, raising the possibility that the study may serve as a first measurement point for future data-series over time.Read moreRead less
Effects Of Lead And Socio-cultural Factors On Cognition And Behaviour Of Children In Port Pirie And Broken Hill
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$394,825.00
Summary
The effect of lead on children's 'intelligence' is controversial. Poorer IQ scores in children with higher exposure to lead, have been found reasonably consistently, - but there is disagreement on whether lead exposure is simply a common ASSOCIATE of poor IQ, or whether it actually CAUSES deficits. In 1994, the NHMRC prudently recommended a graded series of interventions to be implemented, depending on the proprtion of children in the community with blood lead concentrations in specific categori ....The effect of lead on children's 'intelligence' is controversial. Poorer IQ scores in children with higher exposure to lead, have been found reasonably consistently, - but there is disagreement on whether lead exposure is simply a common ASSOCIATE of poor IQ, or whether it actually CAUSES deficits. In 1994, the NHMRC prudently recommended a graded series of interventions to be implemented, depending on the proprtion of children in the community with blood lead concentrations in specific categories above 10 ug lead -100 ml of blood. The choice of this figure (10 ug-dl) was more pragmatic than scientific; there being very little data on the health effects of exposures below 10 ug-dl available at that time. A recent analysis of pooled data from past studies has now suggested there may be very large effects on child IQ at blood lead concentration BELOW 10 ug-dl. Health authorities will soon be lobbied intensely to spend vast sums on new lead abatement programs. Cities like Port Pirie and Broken Hill (where cooperative programs have achieved such significant reductions in lead exposure that a high percentage of their children now have blood lead levels below 10 ug-dl), will be forced to examine expensive options to avoid closure of the industries which provide their economic backbones, if this analysis proves to be correct. Our proposal argues that before committing to new and costly abatement programs, there is an urgent need to augment our evidence-base by conducting a new study ofchildren with lead exposures below 10 ug-dl, using more modern measures of intelligence. The study will pay closer attention to some of the socio-cultural and inherited determinants of child IQ which may have confounded the lead-IQ association in past studies, and will supplement IQ assessments (which are now considered to derive from a very old and narrow view of intelligence) with new tools for measuring 'intelligence' that may be less socio-culturally dependent.Read moreRead less
Living In A Rural Community: A Longitudinal Study Of The Course And Outcome Of Mental Health And Wellbeing.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$841,947.00
Summary
This unique rural Australian study will investigate individual, family and community factors associated with the mental health and wellbeing of residents in rural communities of New South Wales. It aims to identify factors that may maintain or promote mental health, thereby investigating the potential protective effect of community factors, as well as more proximal social factors (such as family-household attributes and responses) on dimensions of mental health and wellbeing among rural people.