‘The March’ Aims to Wake Up Patients
March 1st 1998SILVER SPRING, Md--On September 26, 1998, an event known to its organizers as simply "The March" will take place across the nation. Conceived by Ellen L. Stovall, executive director of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, "The March: Coming Together to Conquer Cancer" is not a march in the traditional sense, but will encompass many different events in many cities.
Mammography Survival Benefits Apply Equally in 40s, 50s
March 1st 1998ORLANDO--Whether women age 40 to 49 should have routine mammo-gram screening continues to be debated, but a University of Chicago study shows that women in this age group benefit from mammography screening as much as women over 50. Jeffrey D. Bradley, MD, lead study author, presented the finding at the annual meeting of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiation and Oncology (ASTRO).
Plan Would Have Medicare Pay Patient Costs for Cancer Trials
March 1st 1998WASHINGTON--Medicare patients who participate in most clinical cancer trials sponsored by the federal government would have their patient-care costs covered for the first time, under a proposal contained in President Clinton’s budget request for fiscal year 1999.
Drug Company R&D Spending Rises
March 1st 1998WASHINGTON--A survey of an industry trade group finds that US research-based pharmaceutical companies plan to spend $20.6 billion for research and development in 1998, an amount equal to 19.6% of the industry’s projected annual revenues. This represents an increase of 10.7% over last year’s R&D funding by the companies, according to the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).
‘Race for the Cure’ Adds Nine New Sites
March 1st 1998DALLAS--The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, producer of the country’s largest series 5K runs known as Race for the Cure, today announced nine new race sites for the 1998 series, bringing the total number of run/fitness walks to 86. Sites added include Austin, Texas; Evansville, Indiana; Grand Rapids, Michigan; Greeley, Colorado; Madison, Wisconsin; Richmond, Virginia; San Antonio, Texas; Thibodaux, Louisiana; and Tupelo, Mississippi.
Computerized Data Systems Enhance Guidelines Accessibility
March 1st 1998SAN BRUNO, Calif--Practice guidelines and outcomes measurement are increasingly viewed as the keys to lowering medical costs while maintaining quality. Once guidelines are devised, the next step is implementation, and this may best be achieved by making guidelines readily accessible via computer programs.
Biomarker Predicts Development of Lung Cancer
March 1st 1998WASHINGTON--One key element to increasing survivorship among lung cancer patients lies in finding ways to detect the disease early, and recent results in the quest for a preclinical biomarker for the malignancy offer great promise, a National Cancer Institute scientist told a Capital Hill briefing.
Steroid Improves Cancer-Fighting Ability of Vitamin D Analog
March 1st 1998A steroid drug enhances the ability of a vitamin D analog to kill cancer while reducing a potentially serious side effect of vitamin D therapy, according to investigators at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI). Their findings on dexamethasone and the vitamin D derivative, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D³ (1,25-D³), in an animal model were reported in the January 21, 1998, issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Regimens Using Two Protease Inhibitors Show Promise
March 1st 1998CHICAGO--A new recipe for the "cocktail" of drugs used to suppress HIV calls for a doubling of the protease inhibitor component, researchers reported at the Fifth Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Joseph P. Eron, MD, of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, described a phase II open-label study comparing four regimens.
Study Links Smoking in College to Other Risky Student Behaviors
March 1st 1998College students who smoke not only are endangering their health but also are likely to have adopted other risky behaviors. A new study by researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Harvard School of Public Health has found that college students who smoke are more likely to use marijuana and other illegal drugs, to be sexually promiscuous, and to be uninvolved in sports and athletic activities.
Panel Says Test Certain Herbs, Additives for Carcinogenesis
March 1st 1998RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, NC--A federal panel has recommended to the National Toxicology Program (NTP) that it review and possibly test a group of products, including three herbs, for their potential to cause cancer or to lead to reproductive and developmental problems.
Gene for Inherited Syndrome May Be a New Tumor Suppressor
March 1st 1998New research has found the gene responsible for Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, a rare inherited disorder that can lead to cancer in many different organs. Unexpectedly, the work may also have uncovered a new category of tumor-suppressor genes.
Patients Need the ‘Three C’s’ to Cope With Cancer
March 1st 1998ORLANDO--For the first time, the keynote address at the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (ASTRO) meeting was delivered by a psychiatrist--Dr. David Spiegel, of Stanford University School of Medicine--who advised the group on how to help their cancer patients cope with their diagnosis.
Economics and Quality of Life in Oncology Clinical Practice
March 1st 1998Pharmacoeconomics and outcomes research are two new sciences that are beginning to affect the practice of oncology. As cost awareness in cancer care becomes acute, practicing oncologists must understand how to apply these sciences to their practices. This publication represents the proceedings of the symposium, Economics and Quality of Life in Oncology Clinical Practice, which was held on November 19, 1997, on the occasion of the EORTC meeting during The First European Conference on the Economics of Cancer. The presentations at the symposium provided an overview of some studies that have begun to explore the variety of activities comprising outcomes assessment, and how such data can be used to help deliver high quality patient care in a cost-conscious environment.
Expert Calls for New Concept of Race in Cancer Studies
March 1st 1998Cancer researchers and clinicians need to adopt a new attitude toward race classifications as interracial parentage in the United States continues to increase. “I want to uncouple race and genetics,” stated Edison Liu, MD, at the 1997 Biennial Symposium on Minorities, the Medically Underserved, and Cancer held in Washington, DC.
Minority Women Successfully Recruited for Dietary Fat Study
March 1st 1998Postmenopausal minority women can be successfully recruited for a program to reduce dietary fat and can achieve significant changes in their eating habits, stated Carolyn K. Clifford, phd, at the 1997 Biennial Symposium on Minorities, the Medically Underserved, and Cancer in Washington, DC.
Dignified Death not Common, Doctors and Nurses Say
March 1st 1998Of acute-care doctors and nurses responding to a national survey, 62% said that clinically hopeless patients have a “dignified death” in the hospital only “sometimes.” Another 33% said that this scenario occurs “frequently,” and just 5% said “always.”
Cultural Factors as Important as Cost in Diet Choices Among Poor
March 1st 1998Diet is a well-established factor in cancer prevention. According to two Baylor College of Medicine researchers, cultural factors play a more powerful role than cost in determining the food choices of people with low incomes. Speaking at the 1997 Biennial Symposium on Minorities, the Medically Underserved, and Cancer, the researchers said that blacks and Hispanics typically eat a less healthy diet than whites, but not because of cost.
Health-Care Challenges Similar for Rural Poor of Different Ethnic Groups
March 1st 1998Regardless of their race, poor rural Americans face similar problems that make it extremely difficult for them to receive adequate health care, reported two experts at the 1997 Biennial Symposium on Minorities, the Medically Underserved, and Cancer in Washington, DC. Many rural Americans are white working poor, noted Linda Linville, phd, assistant director for cancer control at the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center in Lexington. Although they technically do not belong to a racial minority, white working poor individuals generally are among the medically underserved.
Arizona Cancer Center Gets Bristol-Myers Squibb Grant
March 1st 1998TUCSON--The Arizona Cancer Center has received a 5-year, $500,000 Bristol-Myers Squibb Unrestricted Cancer Research Grant. Sydney E. Salmon, MD, Regents Professor of Medicine and director of the center, will serve as the grant administrator. Dr. Salmon announced the new funding at a ceremony held to dedicate the center’s $22.5 million expansion project adding 30 new cancer research laboratories to the center.
NCPB Recommends $2 Increase in Federal Cigarette Tax
March 1st 1998WASHINGTON--The most effective way to reduce tobacco use in both the short and medium term is a $2 per pack increase in the federal excise tax on cigarettes or some other equivalent means to raise the price of tobacco sharply, the National Cancer Policy Board of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) concluded in a recent report.