Archive for the ‘Cancer’ Category

John
Seng

A Never-Smoker With Lung Cancer, And The Point Is…?

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

The next time you hear that a friend of a friend was just diagnosed with lung cancer, you’re bound to wonder privately or out loud: Was he a smoker or not?

It’s only natural. We’re terrified of cancer, and especially, cancers such as lung cancer which are diagnosed usually in late stage, and oftentimes too late to really do much about it. So we all must hear what we need to hear that, yes, this person was or still is a smoker. Phew! We can again comfortably assign blame to some poor soul who should have known better or couldn’t muster the willpower to quit in time. And we think, I don’t smoke, so I’m innocent.

But increasingly we hear from multiple quarters that non-smokers and never-smokers also get lung cancer. In fact, approximately 10 percent of all lung cancer is diagnosed in persons who never smoked. That inconvenient reality surprises a lot of people. In other words, someone who didn’t have it coming to them just got really bad news, despite his or her good behavior, unlike those weak and irresponsible smokers. Some lung cancer advocates report this aberrance, in an attempt to add accurate perspective on the disease. Even more important, researchers are now investigating the differences between tumor types in never-smokers vs. smokers, and why women never-smokers bear a greater burden of disease.

But here’s a radical notion for you, one that I recently suggested to a group of lung cancer advocates gathered in Denver by the National Lung Cancer Partnership: Lung cancer is 100 percent a disease of innocents. I repeat, innocents.

I put forth the proposition that the lifelong female smoker diagnosed with lung cancer is no more “to blame” for her disease than another woman diagnosed with breast cancer. Here’s why. Tobacco use most often begins in our teen years. Raise your hand if you never did anything stupid as a 14-year old. The Army and Navy once distributed cigarettes free to hundreds of thousands of men to help them cope with battle stress. Tobacco companies handed out free samples on college campuses. I once found a copy of an ad for Lucky Strikes that depicts a doctor extolling the virtues of smoking. The best part is, the ad ran in a 1940s edition of The Journal of the American Medical Association. I framed the ad for my office.

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Spectrum

Cancer Researchers Get Down To Business To Save Lives

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

Imagine you’re a cancer researcher. In the lab, you’re up to your elbows testing how cancer cell lines react to different drug combinations – hoping that all your long hours and hard work in the Petri dish will result in a successful treatment you can deliver to the grandparent, soccer mom, coach or even 9-year-old little league player you see in the clinic.

What if along your road to oncology alchemy, you uncover a novel approach to treat your patient’s cancer with another compound that’s shown success in other diseases. It should be simple enough to get access to this compound and begin testing, right?

In actuality, the process of drug co-development is a lot more complex than that. Breast cancer researcher and clinical investigator Dr. Bhuvaneswari Ramaswamy, of The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, breaks down how this process affects her and her patients in the video below.

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Kaitlin
Doody

Colorectal Cancer Advocates Call on Congress

Friday, March 18th, 2011

Live from Capitol Hill – it’s Fight Colorectal Cancer’s fifth annual Call-on Congress Advocacy Day!

Well, not exactly live, but last week, my Spectrum colleague Kelly Barrett and I headed over to Capitol Hill to capture the action and catch up with the Fight Colorectal Cancer advocates encouraging their federal lawmakers to support  several pieces of legislation (as described here) that would make colorectal cancer screenings more available, raise money for cancer research and increase awareness about the cancer responsible for the second highest number of cancer deaths among men and women in the U.S. each year.

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