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

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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 ...

ABC News
New Cases of Cancer Decline in the US
New York Times, United States - Nov 26, 2008
The decline is primarily due to a reduction in death rates from certain common cancers, including prostate cancer and lung cancer in men, breast cancer in ...
US cancer rate declines for the first time Los Angeles Times
Women Smokers Lose 14.5 Years Off Life Span Washington Post
New Cancer Vaccine May Hold Promise For African-American Lung Patients Seattle Medium
Salt Lake Tribune - USA Today
all 521 news articles »
Pulmonary Scarring on Chest X-Ray Is Associated with Lung Cancer ...
Cancer Consultants, ID -
These data may also validate screening radiographs as a screening tool in high-risk individuals. [1] Yu YY, Pinsky PF, Caporaso NE, et al. Lung cancer risk ...
Cancer nurse specialists may get lead role in MSCC care under NICE ...
Nursing Times, UK -
However, Maria Guerin, lung cancer nurse specialist at Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in Liverpool and chairperson of the National Lung ...
Hot Docs: Did Bush White House 'Airbrush' Iraq War History ...
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
Much of the decline is due to progress against several particularly common types of cancer: lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer cases have shown ...
Broccoli may fight cancer in smokers
Irish Independent, Ireland -
Smokers and former smokers who eat lots of broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables may be less likely than other smokers to develop lung cancer. ...
Special Feature Reveals Wide Variations in Lung Cancer Trends ...
Media Newswire (press release), NY -
The findings come from the "Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer, 1975-2005, Featuring Trends in Lung Cancer, Tobacco Use and Tobacco ...
CyberKnife radiation for cancer of prostate in use too fast for some
Arkansas Democrat Gazette, AR -
While there is a biological reason to think that fewer but higher doses of radiation may work well for prostate cancer, skeptics said the studies done so ...
Carbon Nanotubes Detect Lung Cancer Markers in the Breath
Nanotechwire.com, PA -
... at the Israel Institute of Technology have developed diagnostic system that may be able to diagnose lung cancer simply by sampling a patient?s breath. ...
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 ...
Source: Google News


 

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


InjuryBoard.com
Study Finds Vitamin C May Stop Cancer Growth
NBC 10.com, PA -
Arlindo Olivera, 59, was told to go home and die after doctors felt there was nothing else they could do to treat his cancer. Olivera's lung cancer was so ...
Vitamin C Injections Can Destroy Cancer TheMedGuru
all 130 news articles »
Craig W. Philips Takes Helm at CTI
FOXBusiness -
Preclinical and clinical studies support that OPAXIO metabolism by lung cancer cells may be influenced by estrogen, which could lead to enhanced release of ...CTIC - OTC:CMTX
Allos Therapeutics Reports 2008 Second Quarter Results
MarketWatch -
The Company is also investigating PDX in patients with non-small cell lung cancer, bladder cancer and a range of lymphoma subtypes. ...ALTH

AFP
Prostate Tests for Men Older Than 74 Not Always Worthwhile
Bloomberg -
Prostate cancer is the second-most common malignancy among men in the US, after skin cancer, and the second-leading killer for men, after lung tumors, ...
USPSTF Recommends Against Prostate Cancer Screening in Men 75 ... Medscape (subscription)
Prostate Cancer Screening Under Suspicion The Money Times
Task Force Says Men Age 75 and Older Should Not Be Screened For ... Earthtimes (press release)
TheMedGuru
all 627 news articles »
YM BIOSCIENCES REPORTS PHASE II DATA FOR NIMOTUZUMAB IN METASTATIC ...
FOXBusiness -
We intend to file for registration trials in 2008 for patients with non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and for those with brain metastases because of ...YMI
Long-term HIV Treatment May Reduce Risk For Atherosclerosis
Science Daily (press release) -
The study was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Cancer Institute and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
UA study: Woman's bone density may predict breast cancer risk
Tucson Citizen, AZ -
Bone density screenings, most commonly used to detect osteoporosis, may also be helpful in determining a woman's risk for developing breast cancer, ...
County delays decision on radon
Chatham Star Tribune, VA -
According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, radon is the leading cause of lung cancer in nonsmokers and is responsible for 21000 lung cancer deaths ...
American Lung Association Offers Olympic Spectators Tips to Stay ...
MarketWatch - Aug 4, 2008
It can also increase the risk of heart attacks, strokes, lung cancer and even early death. Before spectators leave for Beijing, the American Lung ...

Seattle Times
Icahn Calls Bristol Bid Too Low, Weighs ImClone Split (Update2)
Bloomberg - Aug 4, 2008
ImClone and Bristol-Myers are testing Erbitux, currently approved to treat head and neck tumors as well as colon malignancies, for use in lung and cancer ...
ImClone calls Bristol offer too low Reuters
ImClone: Should Bristol-Myers Pay $70? Wall Street Journal Blogs
Martha, where?s your ImClone stock now? Bizmology
Pharma Times (subscription) - Forbes
all 771 news articles »  IMCL - BMY
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
... Conclusions A subgroup of patients with non?small-cell lung cancer have specific ...
Screening for such mutations in lung cancers may identify patients ...

… Receptor Tyrosine Kinase, in Symptomatic Patients With Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer A Randomized Trial -
MG Kris, RB Natale, RS Herbst, TJ Lynch, D Prager, … - JAMA, 2003 - Am Med Assoc
... The pathobiology of growth-factor signaling in lung cancer may be fundamentally
different from that in other tumors, in which blockade of growth-factor ...

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
... EGFR mutations were found in additional lung cancer samples from ... therapy and in a
lung adenocarcinoma cell ... suggest that EGFR mutations may predict sensitivity ...

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. ...

… of KAI1/CD82 gene expression with good prognosis in patients with non-small cell lung cancer -
M Adachi - Cancer Research, 1996 - AACR
... that assessment of the expression status of KAI1/CD82 and MRP-1/CD9 by tumors may
provide prognostic information on the clinical behavior of lung cancer. ...

[PDF] Ea rly Lung Cancer Action Project: overall design and findings from baseline screening -
CI Henschke, DI McCauley, DF Yankelevitz, DP … - THE LANCET, 1999 - newportbodyscan.com
... 2 , 6 Although these rates imply that survival in lung cancer may be substantially
improved by screening coupled with earlier intervention, results of ...
-

Gefitinib-Sensitizing EGFR Mutations in Lung Cancer Activate Anti-Apoptotic Pathways -
R Sordella, DW Bell, DA Haber, J Settleman - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org
... Similarly, in lung cancer cells with EGFR kinase mutations, gefitinib responsiveness
may result in large part from its effective inhibition of essential anti ...

BRAF and RAS Mutations in Human Lung Cancer and Melanoma 1 -
MS Brose, P Volpe, M Feldman, M Kumar, I Rishi, R … - Cancer Research, 2002 - AACR
... Even if the BRAF mutations are rare, as in lung cancer, they may identify a tumor
sensitive to targeted therapy, resulting in significantly improved outcomes ...

… -small-cell lung cancer. The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Lung Cancer -
G Giaccone, TA Splinter, C Debruyne, GS Kho, P … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1998 - jco.ascopubs.org
... CA Dooms, YN Lievens, and JF Vansteenkiste Cost-utility analysis of chemotherapy
in symptomatic advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer Eur. Respir. J., May 1, 2006 ...

… and ?-Carotene Supplements and Lung Cancer Incidence in the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer -
D Albanes, OP Heinonen, PR Taylor, J Virtamo, BK … - jnci, 1996 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... Carotene supplementation at pharmacologic levels may modestly increase lung cancer
incidence in cigarette smokers, and this effect may be associated with ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

   
   

Crunchy Veggies May Thwart Lung Cancer

A group of compounds found in a wide range of common vegetables may help slow the development of lung cancer, two new studies show.

The compounds -- called isothiocyanates -- are sulphur-containing chemicals that provide much of the flavor found in cruciferous vegetables, which are part of the cabbage family.

Isothiocyanate-rich foods include broccoli, cauliflower, kale, turnips, collards, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, rutabaga, Chinese cabbage, bok choy, horseradish, radishes and watercress.

"The important feature of these studies is that when you treat noncancerous lesions with this compound, the progression of benign lessions into malignancies is actually slowed," said study co-author Fung-Lung Chung, a professor of oncology at Lombardi Cancer Center at Georgetown University Medical Center.

The current research was conducted among mice and in test tubes, rather than in human subjects. However, recent studies have indicated that consuming isothiocyanates may help to prevent cancer in humans by speeding up the removal of carcinogens from the body.

The compound has also demonstrated a potential to inhibit remaining active carcinogens from instigating tumor growth, while actually preventing inactive carcinogens from mobilizing in the first place.

The researchers point out that lung cancer is a leading cause of death among American men and women. Late detection and the general ineffectiveness of chemotherapy contribute to the disease's relatively low survival rate.

In the animal study, Chung and his team exposed a group of mice to an eight-week regimen of carcinogens that are typically found in cigarette smoke and thought to be integral to the development of lung cancer among smokers.

Twenty weeks after the exposure, some of the mice were dissected to determine lung tissue tumor development. The remaining mice were subsequently fed diets containing either high or low doses of phenethyl isothiocyanate and sulforaphane -- two compounds comprised of naturally occurring isothiocynates.

Some of the mice were dissected eight weeks following the start of isothiocyanate treatment, while the remainder was autopsied after either 16 or 22 weeks.

Reporting in the Sept. 15 issue of Cancer Research, the researchers observed that carcinogen-exposed mice placed on the high-dose diet of phenethyl isothiocyanate ultimately developed far fewer malignant tumors than mice not fed such a diet.

Between 13 percent and 19 percent of the high-dose diet mice developed cancerous lung tumors, compared to 42 percent of the mice who were not fed the compound. The lower-dose phenethyl isothiocyanate diet did not, however, provoke a similarly significant reduction in malignant tumor development.

Mice fed sulforaphane diets also experienced low malignancy growth, with between 11 percent and 16 percent developing cancerous lung tumors.

The researchers noted that such lower malignancy growth was associated with both an observed reduction in cancer cell proliferation and an increase in cancer cell "apoptosis" -- or cell suicide -- among the diet-fed mice throughout the treatment period.

Chung and his colleagues emphasized that the stage during which benign lung tumors develop into malignant lung tumors is perhaps the most critical juncture in the progression of lung cancer. And they noted this conversion stage was "strikingly inhibited" in about half the mice that were treated with either of the isothiocyanate compounds.

In a second lab study published in the same journal, the researchers tested the effect that isothiocyanates had on human lung cancer cells in test tubes.

In a laboratory, cell lines of both normal human lung cells and cancerous cells were exposed to phenethyl isothiocyanate compounds similar to the ones used in the mouse study.

Prior to exposure, some of the lung cancer cells had been inserted with a gene that is known to promote fast cell growth, to simulate the normal speedy growth pattern of lung cancer in the body.

The researchers found that the those lung cancer cells that were "designed" for faster growth were also the most affected by exposure to isothiocyanate compounds -- dying off via apoptosis at a significant and faster rate than the non-enhanced cancer cells.

Since the compounds appeared to most effectively target the most active cancer cells, Chung and his team suggested this finding offers up yet another possibly beneficial lung cancer treatment intervention.

In light of both these studies, the authors concluded that future human trials might lead to the development of a regimen of isothiocyanates -- perhaps administered in the form of a "veggie pill" -- to treat both smokers and ex-smokers diagnosed with early lung lesions.

"So this is a very wide range of activity for these compounds, potentially to be used to prevent lung cancer in smokers even before the lesions are present in the lung," Chung added.

"But we need clinical trials to make sure that this benefit can be translated to humans," he stressed.

Bridget Bennett -- a registered dietician and oncology nutritionist with the Continuum Cancer Centers at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City -- strongly agreed with the need for further research.

"We have no doubts that phytonutrients such as isothiocyanates -- when they're isolated and put in compounds -- can actually kill cancer cells," Bennett said. "But when we isolate them out of the test tube, we don't know what we're losing. So we're not sure if this really works. Are we really getting everything we would get if we ate the whole plant?"

"So it boils down to what we've been telling people for a while -- eat many more fruits and vegetables. Probably double what most of us consume," Bennett said. "Because while it's kind of exciting that putting the chemicals next to the cells kills cancer growth, day to day my advice still is: Eat your broccoli."

In related news, a third journal article discussed the findings of a University College London-led study that found that a compound found in beans, nuts, and cereals seems to inhibit a key enzyme related to tumor growth.

The researchers concluded that a diet rich in such foods might also help in the prevention of cancer, as well as leading to new developments in cancer treatment therapies.

More information

For more on cancer and food, check out the American Cancer Society.

Health Tip: If Your Child's Sinuses Are Blocked

September 15, 2005 08:40:42 PM PST

Blocked sinuses, which rarely occur in kids under age five, are often caused by a cold or hay fever, according to St. Louis Children's Hospital.

By treating your child's sinus congestion, you can prevent it from developing into a true sinus infection.

Here are some tips:

  • Use warm water or saline nose drops followed by suction or nose blowing to wash dried mucus out of the nose.
  • Run a humidifier in the home.
  • Ice applied over the sinus for 20 minutes may give some pain relief.
  • With treatment, sinus congestion often resolves in five to seven days.
  • A fever and increased pain could indicate a bacterial sinusitis that may need an antibiotic.

 

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