Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + lung + lungcancer  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Did you mean: cancer + lung + lung cancer  

ABC News
Quit Smoking To Prevent Cancer! Lung Cancer Incidence Higher In ...
eFluxMedia - Nov 29, 2008
Smoking is the main cause of lung cancer. This unhealthy habit increases the risk of many other cancers in women, including breast, oral, pharynx, larynx, ...
New Cases of Cancer Decline in the US New York Times
Women Smokers Lose 14.5 Years Off Life Span Washington Post
Cancer rates fall, but lung cancer still problematic, report says CNN
Chicago Tribune - Los Angeles Times
all 521 news articles »
Pulmonary Scarring on Chest X-Ray Is Associated with Lung Cancer ...
Cancer Consultants, ID -
[3] In the screened population of 77465, a total of 8.9% had a suspicious chest radiograph and lung cancer was found in 126 persons, 44% of whom were Stage ...
Annual Report to the Nation Shows Continued Decrease in Overall ... Cancer Consultants
all 2 news articles »

Medgadget.com
Nano Technology Helps Detect Lung Cancer in Breath
Medgadget.com, CA - 25 minutes ago
To calibrate the devices, the investigators captured the breath of 15 nonsmoking healthy patients and 15 individuals with stage 4 lung cancer. ...
Combining Targeted Therapy Drugs May Treat Previously Resistant Tumors
Science Daily (press release) -
In addition to their association with nearly 30 percent of cases of non-small-cell lung cancer ? the leading cause of cancer deaths in the US ? K-Ras ...
NICE recommends new lung cancer drug
Cancer Research UK - News & Resources, UK -
"This guidance is therefore good news for lung cancer patients who have already tried one chemotherapy regimen that has not worked," he said. ...
Cancer nurse specialists may get lead role in MSCC care under NICE ... Nursing Times
all 2 news articles »
Making aspirin work; standing up to lung cancer
6abc.com, PA - Nov 30, 2008
That's the word from a survey by the Lung Cancer Alliance. The Alliance says patients feel stigmatized, not just by neighbors, friends, and family, ...

Famagusta Gazette
BREAKING NEWS: Former Cyprus President Papadopoulos has lung cancer
Famagusta Gazette, Cyprus -
It has been announced that the former President of Cyprus Tassos Papadopoulos has lung cancer. He has been in hospital for the past few weeks and will ...
Program finds lung cancer nodules
ScienceAlert, Australia -
Deakin University researchers have developed an automated system to improve the vital early detection of lung cancer?one of the most common cancers in ...
Why some ex-smokers develop lung cancer and some don?t
Newspost Online, India -
Canadian researchers claim to have found an answer to why some former smokers develop lung cancer, while others don?t - despite similar lifestyle changes. ...
Artist's works inspired by husband's cancer death
Hartford Courant, United States - Nov 28, 2008
Always, it seems, there are symptoms of cancer. Cancer -- lung cancer in particular -- has shaped the artistic evolution of Hyon, a Wilton artist and member ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: lung cancer + lung cancer: + cancer  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


OverTheLimit.info
Not All Men Need Prostate Cancer Screening
ABC News -
New prostate cancer guidelines say men 75 and older need not be screened. Prostate cancer remains the second-leading cancer killer of men, after lung cancer ...
Prostate Cancer Screening Under Suspicion The Money Times
Prostate Cancer Screening Not For Men Over 75: Panel TheMedGuru
Age Limit on Prostate Cancer Screening? WebMD
Bloomberg - Earthtimes (press release)
all 622 news articles »
YM BioSciences stock drops 22 per cent following release of ...
The Canadian Press,  Ont. -
The company will file for registration trials in 2008 for patients with non-small cell lung cancer and for those with brain metastases "because of ...YMI
Washington Univ. prof wins $728K grant for cancer research
Bizjournals.com, NC - Aug 4, 2008
McQueen said about 40 percent of early-stage lung cancer patients continue or return to smoking within a year. She is interested in working with these ...
Gene Test Leads To Targeted Cancer Treatment
WCCO, MN -
Lung cancer is one of the deadliest forms of cancer. When it's caught early it can be treated, but most patients are diagnosed in the later stages of the ...
Epigenomics AG Reports First Half of 2008 Results
FOXBusiness -
In Q2 2008, Epigenomics successfully completed two clinical studies in its lung cancer program. Both studies were run in close collaboration with the ...FRA:ECX - DGX - EBR:ONCOB

TheMedGuru
Vitamin C Injections Can Destroy Cancer
TheMedGuru, India -
Previous studies show that higher intake of vitamin C reduce human risk for gastricdefine, esophageal, pancreatic and lung cancer. ...
Craig W. Philips Takes Helm at CTI
FOXBusiness -
In addition CTI has submitted an application for approval to market its lung cancer drug candidate OPAXIO in Europe and expects to receive a response from ...CTIC - OTC:CMTX

Los Angeles Times
Breast cancer diagnosis ... and the outcome
Los Angeles Times, CA - Aug 4, 2008
Although breast cancer remains the second-leading cause of cancer death in women (far behind lung cancer), Applegate's disease was caught in the early ...
Test your knowledge of cancer-fighting foods
Chicago Tribune, United States -
In a Finnish study, men who frequently ate onions were 60 percent less likely to develop lung cancer. 1.True. 2. True. 3. True. 4.True. 5.True. 6. False. 7. ...
Physicists Provide 'Guiding Hands' For Proton Therapy
Science Daily (press release) -
... System tumors or in the treatment of people with lung cancer where dose can be restricted to the tumor without affecting nearby tissue and organs. ...
Source: Google News

… in the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Underlying Responsiveness of Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer to … -
TJ Lynch, DW Bell, R Sordella, S Gurubhagavatula, … - New England Journal of Medicine, 2004 - content.nejm.org
Activating Mutations in the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Underlying Responsiveness
of Non?Small-Cell Lung Cancer to Gefitinib. ... Update in Lung Cancer 2005. ...

EGFR Mutations in Lung Cancer: Correlation with Clinical Response to Gefitinib Therapy -
JG Paez, PA Janne, JC Lee, S Tracy, H Greulich, S … - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org
... Reports. EGFR Mutations in Lung Cancer: Correlation with Clinical Response to Gefitinib
Therapy. ... 11. R. Bailey et al., Lung Cancer 41 S2, S71 (2003). 12. ...

Revisions in the International System for Staging Lung Cancer -
CF Mountain - Chest, 1997 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... Chest, Vol 111, 1710-1717, Copyright ? 1997 by American College of Chest Physicians.
ARTICLES. Revisions in the International System for Staging Lung Cancer. ...

Erlotinib in Previously Treated Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer -
FA Shepherd, R Pereira? - New England Journal of Medicine, 2005 - content.nejm.org
Erlotinib in Previously Treated Non?Small-Cell Lung Cancer. Frances A. Shepherd,
MD, Jos? Rodrigues Pereira, MD, Tudor Ciuleanu, MD, Eng Huat Tan, MD, Vera ...

Overexpression of a transporter gene in a multidrug-resistant human lung cancer cell line -
SP Cole, G Bhardwaj, JH Gerlach, JE Mackie, CE … - Science, 1992 - sciencemag.org
... Advancement of Science articles. Overexpression of a transporter gene in a
multidrug-resistant human lung cancer cell line. SP Cole, G ...

Effects of a combination of beta carotene and vitamin A on lung cancer and cardiovascular disease -
GS Omenn, GE Goodman, MD Thornquist, J Balmes, MR … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1996 - content.nejm.org
Effects of a Combination of Beta Carotene and Vitamin A on Lung Cancer and
Cardiovascular Disease. ... Advances in the Biology of Lung Cancer Chemoprevention. ...

Mass screening for lung cancer with mobile spiral computed tomography scanner. -
S Sone, S Takashima, F Li, Z Yang, T Honda, Y … - Lancet, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Mass screening for lung cancer with mobile spiral computed tomography scanner.
Sone S, Takashima S, Li F, Yang Z, Honda T, Maruyama ...

… Chemotherapy and Surgery With Surgery Alone in Resectable Stage IIIA Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer -
JA Roth, F Fossella, R Komaki, MB Ryan, JB Putnam, … - jnci, 1994 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... A Randomized Trial Comparing Perioperative Chemotherapy and Surgery With Surgery
Alone in Resectable Stage IIIA Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. ...

Risk Factors for Lung Cancer and for Intervention Effects in CARET, the Beta-Carotene and Retinol … -
GS Omenn, GE Goodman, MD Thornquist, J Balmes, MR … - jnci, 1996 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... Press Risk Factors for Lung Cancer and for Intervention Effects in CARET,
the Beta-Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial. Gilbert S ...

Comparison of four chemotherapy regimens for advanced non-small-cell lung cancer -
JH Schiller, D Harrington, CP Belani, C Langer, A … - New Eng J Med, 2002 - content.nejm.org
Comparison of Four Chemotherapy Regimens for Advanced Non?Small-Cell Lung Cancer. ...
EGFR Mutation and Resistance of Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer to Gefitinib. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 
 

Genetic Parallels Found Between Lung Development, Lung Cancer; Gene Activity Patterns Provide New Way to Classify Tumors

       BOSTON, July 3 (AScribe Newswire) -- For over 100 years, biologists have speculated that cancer growth shares common features with embryonic development. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston now provide solid evidence for this idea, showing through gene-chip analyses and bioinformatics techniques that many genes that are differentially expressed (turned "up" or "down") during early embryonic lung development are also differentially expressed in lung cancer.

       More importantly, they show that gene-expression profiling can predict a lung cancer's prognosis, and that cancers whose gene expression pattern resembles gene expression during the earliest stages of lung development have the worst prognosis of all.

       "This confirms our earlier finding of the importance of normal organ development in understanding cancer," says Isaac Kohane, MD, PhD, director of the CHIP program and a co-author on the paper. "Our observations might translate into more accurate prognoses and help us identify mechanisms of cancer growth that can be therapeutically targeted."

       Lung cancer, the world's leading cause of cancer deaths, has many known subtypes, but it is commonly misclassified, delaying appropriate treatment. In addition, cancers within a subtype may vary in their aggressiveness.

       Seeking a better way to classify lung cancers, Hongye Liu, PhD, and colleagues in the Children's Hospital Informatics Program (CHIP) examined gene activity in tumors from 186 patients and compared it with the gene activity that occurs during normal embryonic lung development in mice. They also examined 17 samples of normal lung tissue. Starting with 3,500 genes known to be common to mice and humans, they identified 596 genes whose activity was altered both in lung tumors and during lung development.

       Using the natural trajectory of lung development as a framework, Liu and colleagues were able to predict survival in patients with adenocarcinoma (the most common type of lung cancer, and the only type for which they had survival data). Tumors with gene expression patterns most like those during very early lung development had the worst prognosis, while tumors with gene expression patterns resembling those seen late in lung development had the best prognosis. Even within a single adenocarcinoma subtype - stage I disease - survival times varied according to gene expression patterns. Gene expression patterns in normal lung tissue resembled those seen in late in lung development.

       "Before, the idea that cancer and organ development are related was not quantified or statistically significantly demonstrated," says Liu. "The development perspective gives us a new mechanism for understanding cancer."

       The researchers also found that one lung cancer subtype, carcinoid tumors, have a gene expression profile distinct from all the others. When biopsy specimens are examined, carcinoid looks very similar to small-cell lung cancer, and the two are often mistaken for each other, yet their life expectancy and optimal treatments are very different. "By molecular profiling, we can distinguish these two cancers," Liu says.

       In addition, focusing on the 100 genes with the greatest cancer/development correlation, Liu and colleagues found three groups of genes that are involved in biological pathways believed to be key in lung cancer development, and some of the genes showed potential as drug targets. Several genes had stem-cell-like characteristics.

       Liu's work builds on a 2004 study, in which Kohane and Alvin Kho, PhD (another co-investigator on Liu's study) showed that a pediatric brain tumor called medulloblastoma shares many common genetic features with the cerebellum in its earliest stages of development (www.childrenshospital.org/newsroom/Site1339/mainpageS1339P1sublevel81.h tml).

       The current work was funded by the Robert P. and Judith N. Goldberg Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

       Founded in 1869 as a 20-bed hospital for children, Children's Hospital Boston today is the nation's leading pediatric medical center, the largest provider of health care to Massachusetts children, and the primary pediatric teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. In addition to 347 pediatric and adolescent inpatient beds and comprehensive outpatient programs, Children's houses the world's largest research enterprise based at a pediatric medical center, where its discoveries benefit both children and adults. More than 500 scientists, including eight members of the National Academy of Sciences, nine members of the Institute of Medicine and 11 members of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Children's research community. For more information about the hospital visit: http://www.childrenshospital.org.

       - - - -

       CONTACT: James Newton, Children's Hospital Boston, 617-355-6420, james.newton@childrens.harvard.edu

      Media Contact: See above.

 
 
 
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