Antidepressants continue to show increased inhibition of colorectal tumor cell growth
October 29th 2009Use of antidepressants, particularly selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and possibly tricyclic antidepressants, is associated with a reduced risk of colorectal cancer, according to research by the Group Health Research Institute in Seattle. But it’s too soon to make specific recommendations on how to harness this potential value of these drugs in cancer prevention.
New class of alpha emitters takes aim at bone metastases
October 29th 2009A new class of cancer alpha-pharmaceuticals is approaching the marketplace, one built around the basis of radiotherapy itself. An isotope of radium, the element discovered more than a century ago by Pierre and Marie Curie, is the cornerstone of this new class of radiopharmaceuticals.
Proton therapy report advises caution
October 29th 2009The limited evidence on the comparative effectiveness of proton-beam therapy, especially in comparison to other radiation-based treatment modalities, undermines the value of this up-and-coming technology, according to a comparative effectiveness report by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
The Allegheny General Modification of the Harvard Breast Cosmesis Scale for the Retreated Breast
October 23rd 2009Repeat lumpectomy and retreatment radiotherapy following ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) by either external-beam irradiation or brachytherapy in lieu of salvage mastectomy is an area of significant recent clinical interest. Multiple authors have reported their results, with encouraging numbers of patients avoiding mastectomy.[1‑4]
Circulating tumor cells edge out imaging in breast mets
October 20th 2009Five may be the magic number to determine whether a patient can undergo therapeutic monitoring with a test for circulating tumor cells or must undergo an FDG-PET/CT exam, according to research out of M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.
Avastin Breast Rx Trial Enrollment Halted Due to Cardiotoxicity Cases
October 19th 2009Roche announced that enrollment in a phase III clinical trial testing bevacizumab (Avastin) plus chemotherapy for women with early-stage breast cancer was suspended after six patients who were given the drug developed congestive heart failure. Study protocols required that enrollment be stopped if six or more cases of congestive heart failure occurred in the first 200 patients, according to the company.
Pain relief may come at too high a price
October 19th 2009An analysis by researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center shows that costs vary widely for different treatment regimens and from one delivery method to another. Yet receiving more treatments and spending extra on more sophisticated technology may do little good, at least when it comes to pain relief.
Epigenetic mechanisms may drive CD20 negative transformation in B-cell lymphoma
October 19th 2009Resistance to rituximab (Rituxan) has emerged as a considerable problem as the drug has become widely used to treat B-cell lymphomas, such as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. A recent study in Blood suggested that resistance to rituximab is related to downregulation of CD20 expression via epigenetic mechanisms.
Proton-beam therapy calls for unique skills
October 19th 2009The first proton-beam therapy center in Loma Linda, Calif., opened almost 20 years ago, and today six are operating in the U.S. Another center will open by the end of 2009 with several more planned in the next two years, including centers in continental Europe and the UK. A growing body of research affirms the efficacy of proton-beam therapy (see Table).
Ultrasound images bear prognostic gems for oncology
October 16th 2009Subtle clues to the better management of cancer patients may lie hidden in images otherwise used exclusively for diagnosis. German researchers at ECCO/ESMO 2009 have found that ultrasound images of lymph nodes may contain clues to whether and to what extent melanoma has begun to spread. The discovery raises the possibility that ultrasound might help oncologists predict a patient’s probable survival without the need for sentinel node biopsy (abstract O9303).
Adjuvant Rx yields minor benefit in less aggressive colon cancer
October 15th 2009Stage II colon cancer patients who are negative for microsatellite instability and lymphocytic infiltrate should not undergo adjuvant chemotherapy, according to surgeons at Oregon Health and Science University and Legacy Health System, both in Portland.
Low-risk tumors exhibit high proliferation index
October 15th 2009Pathologists at the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn., studied the relationship between the Oncotype Dx recurrence score and the cell cycle-related antigen Ki-67 in 32 breast carcinomas and evaluated for a potential association.
Brachytherapy or Surgery? A Composite View
October 13th 2009The comparison of brachytherapy and surgery may be done on several levels. This review focuses the comparison on toxicity, the “soft” endpoints of biochemical relapse-free survival and clinical relapse-free survival, and the “hard” endpoint of prostate cancer–specific mortality.
Further Perspectives on Treating Localized Prostate Cancer
October 13th 2009Standard treatment options for prostate cancer patients include surveillance, surgery, external-beam radiotherapy, brachytherapy, the combination of external-beam and brachytherapy, and the combination of radiotheraputic modalities with hormonal therapy, for appropriately chosen patients.
Novel chemoRT regimen ups survival in pancreatic ca
September 29th 2009In patients with resected pancreatic cancer, adjuvant cisplatin, 5-FU, and interferon chemoradiation produces a median survival of 27 months, according to initial results of the ACOSOG Z05031 trial. However, nearly all patients experience grade 3 or 4 toxicities.
Quality of life deficits offset benefits of preoperative rectal radiation therapy
September 29th 2009Although preoperative radiotherapy has been shown to improve recurrence and mortality rates in patients with rectal cancer, a quality-of-life analysis by the same researchers suggests that male sexual dysfunction and fecal incontinence may be the trade-offs for those improved outcomes
CT distinguishes liver cancer mets from lung primary
September 28th 2009Researchers in Seoul, Korea, found early-phase contrast-enhanced CT useful for differentiating pulmonary metastases from hepatocellular carcinoma and primary lung cancer. They specifically measured the attenuations of pulmonary nodules on the CT scans.