Oncology and AIDS blog

Roswell Park Appoints Two Physicians to Diagnostic Radiology

August 14th, 2009

Roswell Park. cancer Institute

BUFFALO, NY – Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI) has appointed two physicians to the Department of Diagnostic Radiology. James M. Gannon, MD, will serve in the Division of Nuclear Medicine and Thomas J. Laudico, DO, will join the faculty in the Division of Body Imaging.

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Gala for Life Sept. 11 to Benefit UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute

August 13th, 2009

Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute
Source:
1. Gala for Life Sept. 11 to Benefit UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute

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Roswell Park Appoints Radiation Medicine Physician

August 13th, 2009

Roswell Park. cancer Institute

BUFFALO, NY – Graham Warren, MD, PhD, will be joining the Department of Radiation Medicine and the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI). “I am confident he will contribute significantly to Roswell Park in advancing the field of radiation medicine,” said Michael Kuettel, MD, PhD, MBA, the Barbara C. and George H. Hyde Chair in Radiation Medicine.

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Thoracic Surgeon, Lung Cancer Specialist Matthew Steliga, M.D., Joins UAMS

August 12th, 2009

Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute

LITTLE ROCK – Thoracic surgeon and lung cancer specialist Matthew A. Steliga, M.D., has joined the staff of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as assistant professor in the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery.

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Potential risk identified in transfusions of platelets before bone marrow transplant

August 12th, 2009

Winship Cancer Institute

Research on blood transfusions points to a potential risk of transfusing donated platelets, especially to patients with bone marrow failure syndromes who are subsequently candidates for bone marrow transplantation.

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National Cancer Institute Names Emory to Nationwide NCI Chemical Biology Consortium

August 11th, 2009

Winship Cancer Institute
Source:
1. National Cancer Institute Names Emory to Nationwide NCI Chemical Biology Consortium

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Pioneering Lung Cancer Surgery Directly Delivers Chemotherapy

August 7th, 2009

Roswell Park. cancer Institute

BUFFALO, NY – A pioneering surgical technique for lung cancer that allows the direct delivery of chemotherapy has been developed by Todd Demmy, MD, Chair of Thoracic Surgery at Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI), and is reported in the August 2009 issue of the Annals of Thoracic Surgery.

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In the Modern Post-PSA Era, Prostate Cancer Surgery May Not be Necessary for Some Patients

Study Finds Few Patients Die from Prostate Cancer within Fifteen Years of Radical Prostatectomy

July 27, 2009

NEW YORK, NY - Investigators at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), along with collaborating teams at the Cleveland Clinic and the University of Michigan, have completed the first large- scale, multi-institutional study of prostate cancer death after standard treatment to remove the prostate since PSA screening has become widely used as a method to screen for the disease.

“The importance of this paper is that it shows a remarkably low risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years for treated men, and supports the concept that men with slow-growing cancers may not need immediate treatment.”
– Peter T. Scardino, Chair, Department of Surgery

In the study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, researchers found that in a group of 12,677 men who had radical prostatectomies between 1987 and 2005, the fifteen-year mortality rate that could be directly linked to prostate cancer was only 12 percent, even though many of the patients' cancers had aggressive features. Comparatively, the rate of non- cancer-related death in this group was 38 percent. [PubMed Abstract] A small fraction, 4 percent, of patients treated surgically within the past ten years had a 5 percent or greater risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years. It is not clear at this time whether the outcomes may be related to the effectiveness of surgery and any secondary therapy, or to the low lethality of certain types of prostate cancers to begin with.

“The importance of this paper is that it shows a remarkably low risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years for treated men, and supports the concept that men with slow-growing cancers may not need immediate treatment,” said senior author Peter Scardino, Chair of the Department of Surgery at MSKCC. “Further good news is that surgery was very effective in preventing death in men with aggressive cancers–defined as those with a high PSA, poorly differentiated with a Gleason grade of 8-10, or locally extensive,” Dr. Scardino added.

Not all prostate cancers progress the same way. Many cancers pose little or no threat to life and health, while others grow aggressively and are resistant to treatment. The key is to determine which cancers are “favorable” or ones likely to remain relatively dormant. According to Dr. Scardino, “Currently, there are a number of tools physicians have to help determine the probable course of prostate cancer, but more accurate ones are needed.”

Dr. Scardino and colleagues have formulated and pioneered the use of validated statistical models, or nomograms, that help predict the natural progression of prostate cancer and how it will respond to treatment. These nomograms help tailor treatment for men according to the specific characteristics of their cancer. The prostate cancer nomograms are currently the most widely used, disease-specific prediction tool in oncology.

In addition to the nomogram, physicians may use PSA testing, Gleason grade, MRI scans, and multiple biopsies to determine which cancers are likely to be favorable and which are not. While there are tools and models available now to help predict survival, Dr. Scardino and his fellow authors encourage future research to pinpoint better markers specifically associated with the biology of lethal prostate cancer.

“Further good news is that surgery was very effective in preventing death in men with aggressive cancers–defined as those with a high PSA, poorly differentiated with a Gleason grade of 8-10, or locally extensive.”
– Peter T. Scardino, Chair, Department of Surgery

“In the future, what we'd like is to be able to do a molecular or genetic analysis of prostate tumor cells to see if they have the capacity to spread, so that we can ask, does your tumor have that capacity? If not, it would be safe to watch,” said Dr. Scardino.

As part of the study, 12,677 patients treated with radical prostatectomy between 1987 and 2005 were tracked. Of these patients, 6,398 underwent radical prostatectomy for localized prostate cancer at either MSKCC or Baylor College of Medicine, with 809 (13%) receiving neoadjuvant androgen-deprivation therapy for an average of 3.2 months. External validation of the nomogram was performed on 4,103 patients treated at Cleveland Clinic and 2,176 patients treated at University of Michigan during the same period.

Prostate biopsy specimens were reviewed by pathologists at each institution before surgery. In general, patients were followed for disease recurrence post operatively with regular PSA tests and clinical exams at three to six month intervals for the first five years, and then annually. The year of surgery was also a consideration, as methods and effectiveness have changed over the years.

While prostate cancer death rates have been dropping over the past decade, according to the American Cancer Society, it is estimated that there were 186,320 new cases of prostate cancer in the United States in 2008 and 28,660 deaths from the disease.

Researchers from the Cleveland Clinic, University of Michigan, and Baylor College of Medicine contributed to this study. The work was supported by SPORE grants awarded to MSKCC and the University of Michigan by the National Cancer Institute and by the David Koch Foundation and the Prostate Cancer Foundation.

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In the Modern Post-PSA Era, Prostate Cancer Surgery May Not be Necessary for Some Patients

Study Finds Few Patients Die from Prostate Cancer within Fifteen Years of Radical Prostatectomy

July 27, 2009

NEW YORK, NY - Investigators at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), along with collaborating teams at the Cleveland Clinic and the University of Michigan, have completed the first large- scale, multi-institutional study of prostate cancer death after standard treatment to remove the prostate since PSA screening has become widely used as a method to screen for the disease.

“The importance of this paper is that it shows a remarkably low risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years for treated men, and supports the concept that men with slow-growing cancers may not need immediate treatment.”
– Peter T. Scardino, Chair, Department of Surgery

In the study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, researchers found that in a group of 12,677 men who had radical prostatectomies between 1987 and 2005, the fifteen-year mortality rate that could be directly linked to prostate cancer was only 12 percent, even though many of the patients' cancers had aggressive features. Comparatively, the rate of non- cancer-related death in this group was 38 percent. [PubMed Abstract] A small fraction, 4 percent, of patients treated surgically within the past ten years had a 5 percent or greater risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years. It is not clear at this time whether the outcomes may be related to the effectiveness of surgery and any secondary therapy, or to the low lethality of certain types of prostate cancers to begin with.

“The importance of this paper is that it shows a remarkably low risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years for treated men, and supports the concept that men with slow-growing cancers may not need immediate treatment,” said senior author Peter Scardino, Chair of the Department of Surgery at MSKCC. “Further good news is that surgery was very effective in preventing death in men with aggressive cancers–defined as those with a high PSA, poorly differentiated with a Gleason grade of 8-10, or locally extensive,” Dr. Scardino added.

Not all prostate cancers progress the same way. Many cancers pose little or no threat to life and health, while others grow aggressively and are resistant to treatment. The key is to determine which cancers are “favorable” or ones likely to remain relatively dormant. According to Dr. Scardino, “Currently, there are a number of tools physicians have to help determine the probable course of prostate cancer, but more accurate ones are needed.”

Dr. Scardino and colleagues have formulated and pioneered the use of validated statistical models, or nomograms, that help predict the natural progression of prostate cancer and how it will respond to treatment. These nomograms help tailor treatment for men according to the specific characteristics of their cancer. The prostate cancer nomograms are currently the most widely used, disease-specific prediction tool in oncology.

In addition to the nomogram, physicians may use PSA testing, Gleason grade, MRI scans, and multiple biopsies to determine which cancers are likely to be favorable and which are not. While there are tools and models available now to help predict survival, Dr. Scardino and his fellow authors encourage future research to pinpoint better markers specifically associated with the biology of lethal prostate cancer.

“Further good news is that surgery was very effective in preventing death in men with aggressive cancers–defined as those with a high PSA, poorly differentiated with a Gleason grade of 8-10, or locally extensive.”
– Peter T. Scardino, Chair, Department of Surgery

“In the future, what we'd like is to be able to do a molecular or genetic analysis of prostate tumor cells to see if they have the capacity to spread, so that we can ask, does your tumor have that capacity? If not, it would be safe to watch,” said Dr. Scardino.

As part of the study, 12,677 patients treated with radical prostatectomy between 1987 and 2005 were tracked. Of these patients, 6,398 underwent radical prostatectomy for localized prostate cancer at either MSKCC or Baylor College of Medicine, with 809 (13%) receiving neoadjuvant androgen-deprivation therapy for an average of 3.2 months. External validation of the nomogram was performed on 4,103 patients treated at Cleveland Clinic and 2,176 patients treated at University of Michigan during the same period.

Prostate biopsy specimens were reviewed by pathologists at each institution before surgery. In general, patients were followed for disease recurrence post operatively with regular PSA tests and clinical exams at three to six month intervals for the first five years, and then annually. The year of surgery was also a consideration, as methods and effectiveness have changed over the years.

While prostate cancer death rates have been dropping over the past decade, according to the American Cancer Society, it is estimated that there were 186,320 new cases of prostate cancer in the United States in 2008 and 28,660 deaths from the disease.

Researchers from the Cleveland Clinic, University of Michigan, and Baylor College of Medicine contributed to this study. The work was supported by SPORE grants awarded to MSKCC and the University of Michigan by the National Cancer Institute and by the David Koch Foundation and the Prostate Cancer Foundation.

August 7th, 2009

Memorial Sloan-Ketring Cancer Center

In the Modern Post-PSA Era, Prostate Cancer Surgery May Not be Necessary for Some Patients

Study Finds Few Patients Die from Prostate Cancer within Fifteen Years of Radical Prostatectomy

July 27, 2009

NEW YORK, NY - Investigators at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), along with collaborating teams at the Cleveland Clinic and the University of Michigan, have completed the first large- scale, multi-institutional study of prostate cancer death after standard treatment to remove the prostate since PSA screening has become widely used as a method to screen for the disease.

“The importance of this paper is that it shows a remarkably low risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years for treated men, and supports the concept that men with slow-growing cancers may not need immediate treatment.”– Peter T. Scardino, Chair, Department of Surgery

In the study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, researchers found that in a group of 12,677 men who had radical prostatectomies between 1987 and 2005, the fifteen-year mortality rate that could be directly linked to prostate cancer was only 12 percent, even though many of the patients' cancers had aggressive features. Comparatively, the rate of non- cancer-related death in this group was 38 percent. [PubMed Abstract] A small fraction, 4 percent, of patients treated surgically within the past ten years had a 5 percent or greater risk of dying of prostate cancer within 15 years. It is not clear at this time whether the outcomes may be related to the effectiveness of surgery and any secondary therapy, or to the low lethality of certain types of prostate cancers to begin with. Read the rest of this entry »

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Karmanos Ranked Second in Patient Satisfaction

August 6th, 2009

Karmanos Cancer Institute According to a report released by Consumer Reports on Monday, the Karmanos Cancer Center ranked second in patient satisfaction in metro Detroit. Read the rest of this entry »

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Konstantinos Arnaoutakis, M.D., Joins UAMS Division of Hematology Oncology

August 6th, 2009

Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute

LITTLE ROCK – Konstantinos Arnaoutakis, M.D., has joined the faculty of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as an assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Hematology Oncology. His primary clinical interests are lung cancer and head and neck cancer.

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