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A Diagnosis Of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Doesn’t Always Mean Cancer Spread

April 14, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

Triple-negative breast cancers are a heterogeneous group and may not always be associated with lymph node spread, a new study shows.

The study of 145 triple negative breast cancers (i.e, cancer which is estrogen receptor-negative, progesterone receptor-negative and HER2-negative) in 128 women found that about 23% were moderate or low-grade lesions, said Cecilia Mercado, MD, of New York University School of Medicine, and an author of the study.
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Radiation Beneficial For Older Breast Cancer Patients

April 13, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: News 2 Comments →

A breast cancer patient’s age alone should not determine whether or not she receives standard breast-conservation treatments, including a lumpectomy and radiation therapy; however, if additional health problems (comorbidities) are present, treatments should be individualized based on age and the type of comorbidities, according to a study in the April 1 edition of the International Journal for Radiation Oncology Biology Physics, the official journal of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology.
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New Tool For Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

April 10, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

New clinical data from a study of 570 men published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Urology1 support the use of PROGENSA PCA3 as a tool for diagnosing prostate cancer. The study confirms that PROGENSA PCA3, the world’s first gene-based urine test to help detect prostate cancer, can provide clinicians with valuable information that helps guide diagnosis.
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Enzyme Complex Could Be Key To New Cancer Treatments

April 06, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

Penn State scientists are the first to observe in living cells a key step in the creation of adenine and guanine, two of the four building blocks that comprise DNA. Also called purines, the two building blocks are essential for cell replication. The findings, which will be published in the 4 April 2008 issue of the journal Science, could lead to new cancer treatments that prevent cancer cells from replicating by interfering with their abilities to make purines.
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Risk Of Breast Cancer Reduced By Essential Nutrient Found In Eggs

April 05, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

Choline, an essential nutrient found in foods such as eggs, is associated with a 24 percent reduced risk of breast cancer, according to a study supported by a grant from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), to be published in The FASEB Journal’s print issue in June.(1) This study adds to the growing body of evidence that links egg consumption to a decreased risk of breast cancer.




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Breast Cancer Trial Looks to Set New Global Research Model

April 02, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

A new breast cancer study comparing Herceptin with Tykerb aims to develop a new model for global cancer research. The trial, dubbed ALTTO (Adjuvant Lapatinib and/or Trastuzumab Treatment Optimization), will track all care and data collection in a standardized format, regardless of where patients are being treated.




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Might Mobile Phones Kill More People Than Smoking Or Asbestos?

April 01, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: News No Comments →

A new study reveals that mobile phones (cell phones) may eventually be responsible for more human deaths than smoking or asbestos. Dr. Vini Khurana, an award-winning cancer expert (14 awards) from Australia, has published some grim study results. Khurana added that government and mobile phone companies should do whatever they can to immediately reduce people’s exposure to radiation.
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Racial Differences In Response To Bowel Cancer Genetic Risk Factor

March 31, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: Oncology No Comments →

Scientists have for the first time discovered that people with the same cancer susceptibility genes respond differently depending on their race. Their results are published in Nature Genetics* .

The team from the University of Edinburgh has shown that a genetic marker is associated with an increased the risk of colon cancer in Europeans, but not in the Japanese population. But this genetic variant was associated with a similar risk of rectal cancer in both populations.

While dietary differences are already well known to be important, this discovery shows for the first time that genetic factors might explain some of the differences in bowel cancer risk between populations**.
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Chemotherapy-Induced Anemia Increases Risk Of Local Breast Cancer Recurrence

March 31, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: News No Comments →

Patients with breast cancer who developed anemia during chemotherapy had nearly three times the risk of local recurrence as those who did not, according to a study published in the April 1 issue of Clinical Cancer Research¸ a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

“We speculate that there may be an interaction between chemotherapy/radiotherapy and anemia,” said lead researcher Peter Dubsky, MD, a senior consultant in the department of surgery at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria. “Both treatment modalities have been shown to be less effective in anemic patients. Since we do not see the effect in terms of relapse-free survival, the interaction with local adjuvant treatment may play a more important role.”
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How Does HPV Testing Compare To The Pap Test For Cervical Cancer Screening?

March 30, 2008 By: Laurentiu Category: News No Comments →

In a new collaborative study, the BC Cancer Agency, an agency of the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA), is trying to determine if a test for Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) can replace the standard Pap test as the primary method of cervical cancer screening, allowing women to be screened more effectively and less frequently.

The HPV FOCAL Study – the first long term and largest study of its kind in North America is conducted in collaboration with another PHSA agency, the BC Centre for Disease Control, as well as the UBC Department of Family Medicine and the Faculty of Medicine, McGill University department of Epidemiology, and about 100 family doctors in Greater Vancouver.
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