Future of Proton-Beam Radiation Therapy Shines Among Inoperable Lung Cancers
December 29th 2010Research from Japan documenting remarkable survival rates among patients with inoperable lung cancer may only hint at the potential of proton-beam radiation therapy. The study out of the Proton Medical Research Center in Tennoudai, Japan, documented high survival rates for 55 patients suffering from stage I inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer.
PET/MR challenges PET/CT as ‘go to’ modality in oncology
December 8th 2010A new hybrid technology emerged at radiology’s mega conference in Chicago earlier this month, one that may dislodge decade-old PET/CT from its prominent berth for the diagnosis and monitoring of cancer patients. This new modality combines the positron-imaging component of PET/CT with oncology’s premier anatomic modality, MR, opening the door to cancer images with unprecedented clarity and clinical value.
Handling incidental findings: the (less than) 1% solution
November 29th 2010Pathologies such as infections, or even tumors, crop up from time to time in patients examined for entirely unrelated issues. These "incidental findings"can put doctors-and patients-in a tight spot. How do they proceed with the patient, knowing that many of the asymptomatic signs of disease may never lead to clinical problems, or may simply be false positives?
Common Cancer Link May Unleash Potential of Antibodies
November 29th 2010The search for a magic bullet against cancer historically has glowed bright then dimmed, depending on the stage of discovery. Developments surrounding monoclonal antibodies and angiogenesis inhibitors have followed this cycle, as exuberance for their potential has bowed to the nuances that underlie the complex mechanisms on which they depend.
Common cancer link may unleash potential of antibodies and antiangiogenesis
October 19th 2010The search for a magic bullet against cancer historically has glowed bright then dimmed, depending on the stage of discovery. Developments surrounding monoclonal antibodies and angiogenesis inhibitors have followed this cycle, as exuberance for their potential has bowed to the nuances that underlie the complex mechanisms on which they depend.
Exercise and Camaraderie Fight Aftereffects of Cancer
September 10th 2010Patients are beating cancer only to fall prey to sexual dysfunction, body pain, and chronic disease. The physical symptoms of their success increase the emotional burden, leading to anxiety, depression, and even suicide, as they are reminded daily of the chance that the cancer they had might return or a new one might occur.
Radiation concerns merge for airports and radiation oncology
August 25th 2010Earlier this month two senators introduced the “Consistency, Accuracy, Responsibility, and Excellence in Medical Imaging and Radiation Therapy Act of 2010.” Sens. Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.) and Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) hope through this legislation to guarantee that staff who perform medical imaging and radiation therapy are appropriately qualified by establishing standards for these personnel. It makes sense. Who wants unqualified personnel performing procedures involving ionizing radiation?
Support crumbles for community cancer clinics
August 9th 2010There was a time when a cancer diagnosis meant long commutes for patients in small communities and rural America. The kind of care they needed was available only at tertiary medical centers, typically in metropolitan areas. An expanded network of community cancer clinics changed that, providing convenience and comfort for many thousands of patients. A few years ago those centers were treating four out of five U.S. cancer patients. But now this net of care providers is collapsing under the weight of falling Medicare reimbursement.
Nanoparticles reveal then kill cancers…maybe
July 27th 2010Go back to the beginning of MRI, in the early and mid-1980s, and you’ll find an almost rabid adoption of the modality, despite scant evidence of its clinical value. MRI has since done much to gain the trust of the medical community, opening a diagnostic cornucopia in the process. But the future has to bring more if MR is going to extend this legacy. Researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center are working on it.
UCLA Creates Lymphocytes That Stalk Melanoma
July 13th 2010Like satellites tracking an invading force, a PET scanner at UCLA follows a battalion of tumor-seeking lymphocytes stalking melanoma tumors. Radioactive reporter genes, embedded in the lymphocytes, show the real-time location of these immune cells, genetically engineered to recognize antigens on the surface of the tumor cells.
Emerging radiotherapy relies on SPECT/CT imaging for optimal effectiveness
June 14th 2010They are nearly microscopic, yet ganged together they can pack a big punch. They are microbeads embedded with radioisotopes and infused into body parts containing cancer tumors. The idea is to surround and destroy the tumor. The problem is making sure the microbeads stay put. SPECT/CT can provide the information to make it work.
Cancer vaccines rise from the ashes
June 4th 2010Go back to the Eisenhower years and amid the gray flannel suits, rabid McCarthyism, and dread over nuclear war you’ll find rays of hope in the battle against cancer. Looking back from the 60s, it was easy to believe that this hope was unfounded, an unwarranted faith engendered by the conquest of polio. But it may have been that science simply was not ready.
Dearth of data lowers the bar in debate over radiation and cancer
May 21st 2010Radiologists have come to expect rising demand for CT, which is why anecdotal reports of sudden and dramatic falls in CT volumes have sent a shudder through the community. All the more alarming is that the rumored drop-offs are coming at the request of patients who want nothing to do with CT because they fear its radiation will someday cause cancer. Instead they reportedly are demanding ultrasound or MRI because neither has ionizing radiation -- never mind that neither is indicated, nor, particularly in the case of ultrasound, has much chance of providing useful information.
Glioblastoma cells dodge conventional therapy by changing when they migrate
April 19th 2010Typically glioblastoma patients are dead within 15 months of diagnosis, no matter how complete and well-planned their therapy. Cells sloughed from the brain tumor escape the surgery and somehow stand up to months of radiation and chemotherapy, leading to a recurrence of the tumor and the death of the patient. Researchers at the University of Bonn are beginning to unwind how they do it.
Study sheds light on lung cancer and African Americans
April 15th 2010African Americans have a higher mortality rate from lung cancer than Caucasians, a fact first discovered in the early 1980s. For decades, researchers have looked for differences in access to care, rates of surgery, and patient preferences to explain the disparity. Now it seems the answer may relate at least partly to the way African Americans think about lung cancer.
Forgotten defibrillators needlessly shock terminally ill cancer patients
April 6th 2010Cancer will kill more than a half million people in this country this year. Many will not go quietly. Their diseased hearts, impaired further by a losing battle against cancer, will shut down only to be shocked back to life by implanted defibrillators that could have been turned off but were not.
Research pioneers personalize path to better cancer drugs
March 23rd 2010The regimented and inflexible protocols that have long served as hallmarks of clinical trials are giving way to personalized medical research. A clinical trial begun last week at the University of California, San Francisco will use genetic and biological markers drawn from the tumors of individual patients to identify the treatments most likely to be effective for those participating in the trial.