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ASCO Issues Statement on National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month

Today, as many as 23 million children and teens are obese or overweight, and it is estimated that more than one-third of U.S. adults (more than 72 million people) are obese, according to a statement released by ASCO to help raise awareness of National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month....

issues in oncology

Versatile MicroRNAs Block Cancer Blood Supply, Suppress Metastasis

A family of microRNAs (miR-200) blocks cancer progression and metastasis by stifling a tumor’s ability to weave new blood vessels to support itself, researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center reported in Nature Communications. Patients with lung, ovarian, kidney, or...

survivorship

Modifiable Risk Factors Potentiate Therapy-Associated Risk for Major Cardiac Events in Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer

In a study reported in Journal of Clinical Oncology, Gregory T. Armstrong, MD, of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, and colleagues assessed the frequency of major cardiac events and cardiovascular risk factors among adult survivors of childhood cancer and their siblings. They...

breast cancer
issues in oncology

Breast Cancer Treatment in 10 Years: George Sledge, MD, Offers His Predictions

In a keynote lecture during the 2013 Breast Cancer Symposium breast cancer expert and ASCO Past President George Sledge, MD, offered five predictions for the future of the medical management of breast cancer. Dr. Sledge is now Chief of Oncology at Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto,...

breast cancer

FDA Grants Breakthrough Therapy Status to Entinostat for Advanced Breast Cancer

Syndax Pharmaceuticals Inc today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has designated entinostat as a Breakthrough Therapy for the treatment of locally recurrent or metastatic estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer when added to exemestane in postmenopausal women whose...

supportive care

FDA Announces Class-Wide Safety Labeling Changes for Long-Acting Opioid Analgesics to Combat Abuse

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today announced class-wide safety labeling changes and new postmarketing study requirements for all extended-release and long-acting opioid analgesics intended to treat pain. “The FDA is invoking its authority to require safety labeling changes and ...

leukemia
issues in oncology

Researchers Uncover Genetic Cause of Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

For the first time, a genetic link specific to risk of childhood leukemia has been identified, according to a team of researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, University of Washington, and other institutions. The discovery was reported...

issues in oncology

Dr. Larry Norton, Honored at 2013 Breast Cancer Symposium, Calls for Return to the ‘Exploration of Concepts’

Larry Norton, MD, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, is the recipient of the 2013 Gianni Bonadonna Breast Cancer Award, which he received at the 2013 Breast Cancer Symposium. The Symposium is sponsored by ASCO, the American Society of Breast Surgeons, the American Society of Radiation...

issues in oncology
lung cancer
pancreatic cancer

Molecular Marker Predicts Patients Most Likely to Benefit Longest From EGFR Inhibitors

Scientists at Johns Hopkins have identified a molecular marker called Mig6 that appears to accurately predict longer survival—up to 2 years—among patients being treated with the EGFR inhibitors gefitinib (Iressa) and erlotinib (Tarceva). Results from the preliminary study were published ...

cns cancers

Survival Advantage Seen in Glioblastoma Patients Taking Valganciclovir

Valganciclovir (Valcyte), a drug used to treat cytomegalovirus (CMV) eye infections in people with HIV/AIDS, may lengthen survival in patients with glioblastoma, a Swedish study has found. The researchers evaluated 50 patients with glioblastoma who received valganciclovir as an add-on to standard...

pancreatic cancer

FDA Approves Nab-Paclitaxel for Late-Stage Pancreatic Cancer

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today expanded the approved uses of paclitaxel protein-bound particles for injectable suspension, albumin-bound (nab-paclitaxel, Abraxane) to treat patients with late-stage pancreatic cancer. “Patients with pancreatic cancer are often diagnosed...

cns cancers

New Laser-Based Tool Could Dramatically Improve the Accuracy of Brain Tumor Surgery

A new laser-based technology may make brain tumor surgery much more accurate, allowing surgeons to tell cancer tissue from normal brain at the microscopic level while they are operating, and avoid leaving behind cells that could spawn a new tumor. In a new paper published in Science Translational...

breast cancer

Most Women Have an Inaccurate Perception of Their Breast Cancer Risk, Study Reveals

A large-scale survey of women undergoing mammography screening on Long Island, New York, indicates that the majority (90.6%) either underestimate or overestimate their lifetime risk for developing breast cancer. Furthermore, 4 in 10 women surveyed reported they had never discussed their...

supportive care
issues in oncology

New Report Examines Trends in End-of-Life Care for Patients With Advanced Cancer

Although fewer Medicare patients with cancer died in the hospital in 2010 than in the years 2003–2007, aggressive treatment continues at the end of life, according to a new report from the Dartmouth Atlas Project. The findings also show that a significant number of patients were likely to...

hepatobiliary cancer

Survival Trend With Palliative FOLFOX4 vs Doxorubicin in Asian Patients With Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma

In a study reported in Journal of Clinical Oncology, Shukui Qin, MD, of People’s Liberation Army Cancer Centre, Bayi Hospital, in Nanjing, and colleagues compared FOLFOX4 (infusional fluorouracil [5-FU], leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) with doxorubicin as palliative chemotherapy in patients with ...

breast cancer

School-Age Drinking Increases Breast Cancer Risk

The more alcohol young women drink before motherhood, the greater their risk of future breast cancer, according to new research from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Previous studies have looked at breast cancer risk and alcohol consumption later in life or at the effect of...

leukemia

St. Jude's Study Yields New Strategy Against High-Risk Leukemia

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital investigators have identified a protein that certain high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells need to survive and have used that knowledge to fashion a more effective method of killing tumor cells. The findings appear in the August 29 edition of ...

lung cancer
issues in oncology

Scripps Florida Investigators Detail Critical Role of NOTCH1 Gene in Many Lung Cancer Cases

Investigators from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute have shown that NOTCH1, a well-known cancer-causing gene implicated in a number of malignancies, plays a far more critical role in non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) than previously thought. These findings establish the...

survivorship

Danish Study Evaluates Risk of Mental Disorders in Siblings of Childhood Cancer Survivors

Survivors of childhood cancer are at risk for long-term adverse physical and mental effects, but little is known about the effects of illness in siblings of these patients. In a study reported in Lancet Oncology, Lasse Wegener Lund, MD, of the Danish Cancer Society Research Centre in...

head and neck cancer

More Prudent Interpretation of Thyroid Ultrasound Could Reduce Unnecessary Biopsies

Thyroid ultrasound imaging could be used to identify patients who have a low risk of thyroid cancer for whom biopsy could be deferred, according to a retrospective case-control study by Rebecca Smith-Bindman, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, and colleagues in...

lymphoma
survivorship

NCI Study Links Hodgkin Lymphoma Treatment to Risk of Stomach Cancer

Hodgkin lymphoma survivors who received subdiaphragmatic radiotherapy and chemotherapy regimens containing high doses of the alkylating agent procarbazine (Matulane) were at an increased risk of developing stomach cancer, according to a large study by scientists at the National Cancer Institute...

gynecologic cancers

Genomic Differences Found in Two Types of Cervical Cancer

A study by Alexi Wright, MD, MPH, and colleagues at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston has found that two common subtypes of cervical cancer, adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, have distinct molecular profiles. The results suggest that clinical...

issues in oncology
issues in oncology

Smoking Cessation and Prevention App Free on iTunes

An app to prevent teens from smoking and encourage them to quit if they have started is now available at no cost on the Apple iTunes Store. “Our app combines education and entertainment with comics and interactive games,” said Designer Alexander Prokhorov, MD, PhD, a Professor in the...

skin cancer

Enhanced Treatment, Surveillance Needed for Certain Melanoma Patients to Prevent Secondary Cancers, Researchers Say

Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, suggest secondary cancers seen in melanoma patients who are being treated for a BRAF gene mutation may require new strategies, such as enhanced surveillance and combining BRAF-inhibitor therapy with other inhibitors, especially as they become...

cns cancers

Brain Cancer Survival Improved Following FDA Approval of Bevacizumab, Mayo Study Finds

A new population-based study has found that patients with glioblastoma who died in 2010, after the FDA approval of bevacizumab (Avastin), had lived significantly longer than patients who died of the disease in 2008, prior to the conditional approval of the drug for the treatment of  brain...

skin cancer
issues in oncology

Indoor Tanning Common Among Young White Females Despite Skin Cancer Risk

Indoor tanning, defined as using a tanning booth, sun bed, or sunlamp, is common among non-Hispanic white female high school students and young adults, despite risks of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer, according to Gery P. Guy, Jr, PhD, MPH, and colleagues of the Centers for Disease...

prostate cancer

Researchers Identify Key Protein in Treatment-Resistant Prostate Cancer

Prostate cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer in men and the leading cause of cancer deaths in white, African American, and Hispanic men, according to the Centers for Disease Control. However, it remains unclear why, despite treatment, some prostate cancers progress and may become...

prostate cancer

Night or Rotating Shift Work Associated With Increased Risk for High PSA

Some data support an association between circadian disruption and prostate cancer. In a study reported in Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Erin E. Flynn-Evans, PhD, of the Division of Sleep Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and colleagues assessed the association between...

lymphoma

New Research Suggests Restricting Calories May Improve Response to Cancer Treatment

New research suggests that restricting calories for a defined period of time may improve the success of cancer treatment, offering valuable new data on how caloric intake may play a role in programmed cancer cell death and efficacy of targeted cancer therapies. Study results were published online...

multiple myeloma
issues in oncology

Gene That Helps Control Aging Is Linked to Multiple Myeloma

A telomerase RNA component gene called TERC, which is responsible for regulating the length of caps on the ends of DNA molecules and believed to be involved in the aging process, has been linked to the development of multiple myeloma, according to a study published in Nature Genetics. Researchers...

issues in oncology
leukemia

Intrachromosomal Amplification of Chromosome 21 Associated With Poor Outcome in Children With ALL

Intrachromosomal amplification of a region of chromosome 21 (iAMP21; three or more extra copies of RUNX1 on an abnormal chromosome 21) is a recently identified recurrent genomic abnormality associated with poorer outcome in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In a study reported in Journal of...

issues in oncology

Best of ASCO 2013: Promises and Challenges of Applying Molecular Profiling to Clinical Practice

A “new kind of pathology,” in which anatomy and histology are supplemented by molecular etiology, has been emerging over the past decade and promises better response rates among cancer patients as genomic alterations in cancer continue to be identified and treated with targeted...

breast cancer

Study Finds 1 in 5 Women Don’t Believe Their Breast Cancer Risk

Despite taking a tailored risk assessment tool that factors in family history and personal habits, nearly 20% of women did not believe their breast cancer risk, according to a new study from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center. The findings, published in Patient Education and...

breast cancer

Breastfeeding for More Than 6 Months May Protect Against Breast Cancer in Nonsmoking Women

A new analysis has found that breastfeeding for more than 6 months may safeguard nonsmoking mothers against breast cancer. However, the same does not seem to hold true for mothers who smoke. Published early online in the Journal of Clinical Nursing, the findings add to the list of benefits of...

prostate cancer

Researchers Identify Key Mechanism Behind Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

A team of researchers from UC Davis, UC San Diego, and other institutions has identified a key mechanism behind aggressive prostate cancer. Published online today in Nature, the study shows that two long noncoding RNAs, PRNCR1 and PCGEM1, activate androgen receptors, circumventing...

skin cancer

Enhanced Treatment, Surveillance Needed for Patients With BRAF-Mutant Melanoma to Prevent Secondary Cancers

Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center suggest secondary cancers seen in melanoma patients who are being treated for a BRAF gene mutation may require new strategies, such as enhanced surveillance and combining BRAF inhibitor therapy with other inhibitors, especially as they become more widely used....

prostate cancer

Study Suggests Low-Grade Prostate Cancers May Not Progress Over Time

Data analyzed from a large cohort study of men diagnosed with prostate cancer found that prostate cancer aggressiveness may be established when the tumor is formed and not change over time. The researchers of the study, Kathryn L. Penney, ScD, Instructor in the Department of Medicine at Harvard...

cns cancers

Study Suggests Neural Stem Cells May Regenerate After Radiation Therapy

Scientists have long believed that healthy brain cells, once damaged by radiation designed to kill brain tumors, cannot regenerate. But new research in mice suggests that neural stem cells, the body's source of new brain cells, are resistant to radiation, and can be roused from a hibernation-like...

issues in oncology
issues in oncology

Best of ASCO 2013: Off-Label Prescribing of Chemotherapy Drugs Is Common but Most Meets NCCN Compendium Criteria

Off-label prescribing of drugs remains common in oncology, but about two-thirds of off-label prescribing is consistent with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Drugs & Biologics Compendium, according to a study reviewed at Best of ASCO Chicago by Monika K. Krzyzanowska, MD, MPH, of ...

Family Members of Children With Cancer Are Also at Risk for the Disease

Parents and siblings of children with cancer have between a two- and four-times increased risk of developing cancer than first-degree relatives with no childhood cancer patients, according to a study published in the International Journal of Cancer. The study, led by Joshua Schiffman, MD, Medical...

FDA Approves Dolutegravir to Treat HIV-1 Infection

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today approved dolutegravir (Tivicay), a new drug to treat HIV-1 infection. Dolutegravir is an oral integrase strand transfer inhibitor that interferes with one of the enzymes necessary for HIV to multiply. The drug is taken in combination with other...

solid tumors

Study Identifies Interleukin-11 as a Potential New Anticancer Target

According to a study published online today in Cancer Cell, the molecule interleukin-11 may be a potential new target for anticancer therapies. Until now, interleukin-11’s role in cancer development has been underestimated, but researchers have recently identified this molecule as a "dark...

Certain Major Birth Defects Associated With Moderately Increased Cancer Risk in Children

A multistate study led by researchers at the University of Utah has revealed that the risk for childhood cancer is moderately increased among children and young adolescents with certain types of major birth defects. Children born with nonchromosomal birth defects have a two-fold higher risk of...

leukemia

Lab-Grown Stem Cell–Derived T Cells Fight Cancer in Tumor-Bearing Mice

Although small clinical studies of adoptive T-cell therapy in the treatment of advanced forms of leukemia have shown positive results, including putting some patients into complete remissions, progress in the development of this type of immunotherapy is limited by the lack of readily available,...

issues in oncology

NIH Scientists Visualize How Cancer Chromosome Abnormalities Form in Living Cells

For the first time, scientists have directly observed events that lead to the formation of a chromosome abnormality that is often found in cancer cells. The abnormality, called a translocation, occurs when part of a chromosome breaks off and becomes attached to another chromosome. The results of...

FDA Approves First Rapid Diagnostic Test to Detect Both HIV-1 Antigen and HIV-1/2 Antibodies

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today approved the first rapid human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) test for the simultaneous detection of HIV-1 p24 antigen as well as antibodies to both HIV-1 and HIV-2 in human serum, plasma, and venous or fingerstick whole blood specimens. Approved for...

issues in oncology

Study Analyzes Oncologists’ Attitudes Regarding Patient-Reported Outcomes

A recent study published in the Journal of Oncology Practice assessed the feasibility and value of incorporating patient reported outcomes into oncology practice. Although previous research has shown that using patient-reported outcomes in oncology can improve physician-patient communication and...

lymphoma

FDA Grants Orphan Drug Status to Eisai’s Investigational Compound E7777 for Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to Eisai’s investigational compound E7777 for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.  E7777 is designed to have an improved purity profile and manufacturing process. It is currently in a pivotal trial intended to support ...

leukemia

Vaccine Stirs Immune Activity Against Advanced Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

Patients with advanced chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) often receive allogeneic transplants that effectively “reboot” their own immune defenses, which then attack and potentially cure the hard-to-treat disease. However, there is a high rate of relapse in these patients, and the...

cns cancers
issues in oncology

Study Reveals Genes That Drive Glioblastoma

A team of researchers at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia University Medical Center has identified 18 new genes responsible for driving glioblastoma multiforme, the most common—and most aggressive—form of brain cancer in adults. The study was published online...

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