The Absent-Minded Professor: An Unusual Complication of Melanoma
The University of Colorado Health Sciences Center holds weekly second opinion conferences focusing on cancer cases that represent most major cancer sites. Patients seen for second opinions are evaluated by an oncologist.
Inflammatory Breast Cancer: A Complex Disease
December 1st 2008In this issue of ONCOLOGY, Houchens and Merajver[3] have commendably attempted to summarize the results of existing research into the molecular determinants of this aggressive disease. The authors have focused specifically on classical prognostic and predictive markers, although these are not specific to the IBC breast tumor subtype.
Two Orphan Drug Designations Granted for Reviroc in NHL
December 1st 2008The biopharmaceutical company Kiadis Pharma recently announced that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted its product Reviroc orphan drug designations for the treatment of two types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL)-one for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and the other for the treatment of follicular lymphoma.
NDA Submitted for Trabectedin to Treat Relapsed Ovarian Cancer
December 1st 2008Ortho Biotech recently announced the submission of a new drug application (NDA) to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for trabectedin (Yondelis) when administered in combination with liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil) for the treatment of women with relapsed ovarian cancer.
Alemtuzumab May Lead to Longer Overall Survival in CLL Patients With Poor Prognostic Factors
December 1st 2008Results from three studies presented at the ASH meeting showed that treatment with alemtuzumab (Campath) had activity in high-risk chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients who have poor prognostic indicators.
21st Century Challenge of Ovarian Cancer in the Elderly
December 1st 2008Given that in the 21st century many believe 70 years of age is the new 60 and 80 years of age is the new 70, any article on ovarian cancer in the elderly depends on one’s definition of elderly. To put this in a 21st century perspective, in a thoughtful article on aging in The New Yorker (“The Way We Age Now,” April 30, 2007), Atul Gawande points out, “for most of our hundred-thousand-year existence-all but the past couple of hundred years-the average life span of human beings has been 30 years or less (research suggests that subjects of the Roman Empire had an average life expectancy of 28 years).
Molecular Determinants of the Inflammatory Breast Cancer Phenotype
December 1st 2008Since its early descriptions by Lee and Tannenbaum in 1924, inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) has been recognized as the most aggressive and lethal form of primary breast cancer. With distinct clinical, pathologic, biologic, and molecular features, IBC presents unique challenges and opportunities to breast oncologists and breast cancer researchers.