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NEW YORK-In recent years, the practicing anesthesiologist has become more involved in the management of pain and has to be aware of the increasing number of treatments available, said Carol A. Warfield, MD, chief, Division of Pain Services, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Boston.

ALEXANDRIA, Virginia-Drinking grapefruit juice with certain medications, including at least one widely used in cancer treatment, may inhibit their absorption, according to an in vitro study in the April 1999 issue of Pharmaceutical Research, a publication of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS).

ORLANDO-Both dye and radioactive tracer are required for finding sentinel lymph nodes most accurately in patients with operable breast cancer, but small intradermal injections of the tracer can be used instead of intraparenchymal tracer injections, researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center reported at the Society of Surgical Oncology’s Annual Cancer Symposium.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla-Before talking about the various “patients’ bill of rights” legislation before the US Congress, Harry D. Holmes, PhD, played the theme from the movie Back to the Future. “That’s what it seems like in managed care reform, since all of these bills were filed last year and here they are again, both in the House and the Senate.”

WASHINGTON-Overall cancer incidence and mortality have continued to decline in the United States, but incidences of some cancers continue to rise, and significant differences in both incidence and mortality persist among different racial and ethnic groups.

WASHINGTON-During the past 16 years, researchers have developed data that suggest cannabinoid-based drugs may be effective for a variety of medical uses, including pain relief, antiemesis, and appetite stimulation in cancer patients, an Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee has concluded. It warned, however, that such medical uses carry some risks, particularly the harmful effects of smoking marijuana, which it discouraged as a means of delivering medications.

Discovery of a marker that allows tracking of thymus function also shows how the adult immune system might repair itself after being damaged by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas scientists report

ROCKVILLE, Md-Two cancer-related topics are among four new evaluations the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) has asked the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force to make. The task force is an independent panel of preventive health experts that evaluates the effectiveness of a wide range of clinical preventive services.

BETHESDA, Md-The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has earmarked $30 million for use over the next 5 years to support a group of projects that will unite research scientists and community leaders in efforts to address disparities in national cancer rates among minorities and other underserved groups.

ALEXANDRIA, Va-“The Health Care Finance Agency’s plan to reimburse for outpatient Medicare cancer treatment according to ambulatory payment classifications (APCs) would have a crippling effect on research and development of new drug therapies and lower the quality of care for present and future cancer patients,” Congressman Gene Green, Representative of the 29th District of Texas in the US House of Representatives, said at the Annual Meeting of the Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC).

BETHESDA, Md-The first human trials of the antiangiogenesis drug endostatin will take place at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. The National Cancer Institute (NCI), which will sponsor the phase I trials, said that the studies will begin in late summer or early fall. Protocols for the two studies had not been worked out at the time of the NCI’s announcement.

Champlin et al review a most interesting topic that has emerged recently; namely, the use of nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens to induce immune-mediated graft-vs-leukemia (GVL) effects, or, in a more general sense, graft-vs-tumor (GVT)

While in Denmark under an ASTRO/ESTRO fellowship travel grant, Dr. Brian Kavanagh spoke with a number of oncologists at the University of Aarhus about their research and the practice of oncology in Denmark. In this essay, he skillfully weaves Danish history, philosophy, customs, and landscape into his interviews with four eminent Danish physicians.

In his 1975 New England Journal of Medicine review article on bone marrow transplantation, Nobel laureate E. Donnall Thomas listed the major obstacles to successful transplantation as donor availability, graft-vs-host disease (GVHD), treatment-