Today is Monday, January 05, 2009


When this edition of Words To Live By was originally published, the links below opened active web pages.
Because many web sites discard or move content after a period of time, some links included here may no longer work.


New Page 1 August 29, 2008                     Have A Safe Holiday Weekend
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News Headlines

Bortezomib Added to Melphalan Improves Myeloma Response
Esophageal Cancer Rising Steadily for White Americans
Amifostine Lowers Risk of Cisplatin-Related Hearing Loss in Children
Benign Skin Cancers May Be ''Warning Sign''
Burning Incense Linked to Respiratory Cancers
Pegylated Liposomal Doxorubicin Prevents Relapse of HIV-Related Kaposi Sarcoma
US Medicare Panel Questions PET Scan Cancer Data
Zoledronate Prevents Bone Loss During Endocrine Treatment for Breast Cancer
Persistent Depression Associated with Taxane-Based Chemotherapy
Lower Risk Seen with Radical Prostatectomy Versus Watchful Waiting
Cisplatin-Based Chemo Improves Post-Op Survival in NSCLC
Stem Cells Could Allow ''Blood Farms'


Cancerpage news is updated daily, Monday through Friday, and on the weekends as warranted.   More than 36 new articles have been added to cancerpage news since the last newsletter.  To see ALL the latest stories, go to the cancerpage.com search page and click on Submit (but leave 'search' field black.) 


 Follow-up

Olympic swimmer Eric Shanteau underwent surgery in Atlanta for testicular cancer on Wednesday. Doctors will know more about his prognosis today. Testicular cancer, when caught early, usually has a very good prognosis. It is often highly responsive to available treatments. Read more about the olympic breaststroke swimmer here.  


 Medical Debt on the Rise

The Commonwealth Fund reported that U.S. consumers are racking up increasing mounds  of medical debt.  Last year, nearly 2/3rds of adult Americans struggled to pay medical bills, delayed getting needed care,  went without insurance, or were underinsured for a period of time (which means they had insurance but were not protected against  high medical expenses from a disease such as cancer.)  More than a quarter of adult Americans say they're paying off medical debt. 

This - the experts insists - is a potent issue for this year's election cycle. The report finds a large constituency affected: "Insurance coverage deteriorated over the past six years, with declines in coverage most severe for moderate-income families."

You can read the whole report and see the stats to back it up here.


Tykerb Boxed Warning

The FDA added a boxed warning to the breast cancer drug TYKERB (lapatinib) in July after liver damage and deaths were reported in some patients taking the kinase inhibitor therapy. The boxed warning does not go so far as to blame the deaths on the drug however, saying what caused the deaths has not been determined.  TYKERB is given to women with advanced metastatic breast cancer whose cancer over-expresses the protein HER2 after their cancer has stopped responding to other treatments. 

Read more about the warning here.  Read the patient insert here.

In other lapatinib news - in the lab in mouse models anyway - lapatinib slows the spread of breast cancer cells to the brain by 50%. About a third of women with HER2 positive breast cancers develop metasteses to the brain so finding a drug that can cross the blood/brain barrier and  inhibit the spread is important.  Read more about the research here.


Cancer Stinks

Since earlier in the decade, it's been suggested cancer has its own peculiar odor. It may not be an odor that humans can pick up but it is something a super-sentative dog snout can sniff out.  (Stories lung, lung, and bladder.)  Now scientists speaking at the American Chemical Society meeting in Philadelphia believe they've identified an "odor profile" of basal cell carcinoma - one of the most common types of non-malignant skin cancers. Read more about it here.


New Patient Information About Anemia Drugs

The FDA, OthoBiotech and Amgen have released  new updated safety information about the use of anti-anemia drugs in cancer patients. You can read the latest advisory for patients here.


In the Lab

Ohio researchers have found that when mice are fed concentrated black rasberry powder at the same time that they are exposed to cancer-causing chemicals, the growth of throat cancer cells appears to be slowed.  Read more about the research  here.

University of California, San Diego, researchers have identified a gene variation that renders some ovarian cancers resistent to the most common first-line chemotherapy - cisplatin.  This could lead to development of a gene test that would allow women to skip toxic therapies that provide little benefit.  Read more here.

 


The weekly cancerpage

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