Bone Marrow Biopsy for the Initial Staging of Patients With Lymphoma: Too Soon to Toss the Trephine
December 15th 2013Although the prospect is tempting, we do not believe there are sufficient grounds at this time to abandon bone marrow biopsy in patients with lymphoma. It still provides robust prognostic information, and in the majority of patients it remains an indispensable staging tool.
Duration of Aromatase Inhibitor Treatment in Breast Cancer: The Role of the ‘Carryover Effect’
December 15th 2013The so-called “carryover” effect of tamoxifen results in the reduction in recurrence continuing well after treatment has stopped. The carryover effect is seen mostly in the first 5 years after treatment cessation, and recent evidence suggests that after that time, it is largely over.
TCGA's Breast Cancer Project May Yield Important Therapeutic Benefits, but It's Too Early to Be Sure
December 15th 2013The strongest aspect of TCGA is that the data are publically available, fueling the input needed for unparalleled discovery. As the broader scientific community continues to analyze and integrate TCGA data with their own datasets, it is highly likely that breast cancer patients will benefit.
Translating the TCGA Breast Cancer Results Into Clinical Practice: Searching for Therapeutic Clues
December 15th 2013TCGA’s efforts to dissect the genomic complexity found in breast cancer patients represents only the beginning of a journey toward better understanding of the intricacy of the events that lead to this disease. Additional efforts are required to provide tailored and effective therapeutic interventions.
POEMS Syndrome: Still an Enigma?
December 15th 2013Because of challenges in making the correct diagnosis and the physician’s reluctance to administer chemotherapy for a disease characterized by such a low tumoral mass, patients may experience a delay in the initiation of appropriate treatment.
POEMS Syndrome: What's in a Name?
December 15th 2013While the name POEMS (polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal gammopathy, and skin changes) provides a nice acronym for a collection of seemingly disparate features, the diagnosis does not require that all these elements be present, and many other features are not included.
Roundtable: the ACA and Cancer Care
December 15th 2013Shortly after the rollout of the new healthcare exchanges, we asked the members of ONCOLOGY’s Editorial Board to share their impressions of what they were seeing-and what they expected to see-in terms of the effects of the ACA on practicing oncologists and their patients.
A Comparison of FDA and EMA Drug Approval: Implications for Drug Development and Cost of Care
December 15th 2013The development and approval of oncology therapeutics has been facilitated by the cooperation and coordination of regulatory practices between the EMA and the FDA. However, there continue to be important differences between the decisions of the two agencies.
Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy for Breast Cancer: How Long Is Long Enough?
December 15th 2013New evidence now supports improved recurrence and breast cancer mortality outcomes with continued tamoxifen for up to 10 years in women of any age, and such long-duration therapy is especially important for women who remain premenopausal after their first 5 years of tamoxifen.
Breast Cancer: Expanding the Old-Exploring the New
December 15th 2013Can knowledge of a patient’s breast tumor genome help select the optimal treatment, and when we have an effective treatment for a group of patients-in this case, for breast cancer patients in the adjuvant setting-how long should the course of treatment be?