Today is Thursday, November 20, 2008


When this edition of Words To Live By was originally published, the links below opened active web pages.
Because many web sites discard or move content after a period of time, some links included here may no longer work.


New Page 1 August 01, 2008
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News Headlines

Obesity Increases Risk of Certain Ovarian Cancers
John McCain Skin Biopsy Negative for Cancer
Risk of Breast, Ovarian Cancer Increased in Infertile Women
Early PET Scans May Predict Response to Chemo in Leukemia
Second-Line Doxorubicin/Ketoconazole An Option in Hard-to-Treat Prostate Cancer
Impotence Drugs Help Treat Brain Tumors: Study
Cognitive Decline Common with Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer
Active Surveillance a Good Option for Some Men with Early Prostate Cancer

Cancerpage news is updated daily, Monday through Friday, and on the weekends as warranted.   More than 24 new articles have been added to cancerpage news since the last newsletter.  To see ALL the latest stories, go to the cancerpage.com search page and click on Submit (but leave search field black.) 



What's Lurking in Your Home

Granite has become a popular building material in kitchens, bathrooms, and entrance ways.   An article in the NY Times this week  has spread alarm.  Some granite may have high levels of radon in it, as a Teaneck, N.J. found out when she had a routine home inspection done  on a summer home two years ago and found unusually high levels of radon in her granite kitchen counter tops and exposure to radon gas has been linked to increased risk of lung cancer.  She had them ripped out.  Her story was told in the New York Times.    
You can read the NY Times report here
Here's an  Environmental Protection Agency  statement updated earlier this week in response to the NT Times report. You can  signup to be informed by the EPA when they have posted an update to their Radon/Granite statement.

A response to the NY Times  report from the Marble Institute of America is here.


Whom Do You Trust?

While most American adults say their doctor is their most trusted source for health information,  the trust apparently drops the younger you get and 38%, or 85.6 million U.S. adults, have doubted the opinion of medical professionals when it conflicts with online information.   Two new surveys were recently released about the kinds of health info people look for online and what they make of it. 

The work by the well-known opinion researchers Harris Interactive can be found here.   Harris found a leveling out of online health info surfing at about 80% of adults who are online.  Most find info reliable enough to keep them coming back. 

The market research firm  Kelton Research  looked at age and ethnic groups and authorship of the health info sought. A writeup of their findings can be seen here .


Where Does Your Candidate Stand?

Oncology News International takes a look inside the Obama and McCain health care proposals by covering the ASCO panel on the topic this past Spring.  Jonathan Gruber, PhD, professor of economics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a health economist who consulted with several of the Democratic presidential candidates, and Gail Wilensky, PhD, with Project Hope, an advisor to McCain look at the fundamentally different approaches. Read the article here.

The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation's Health08 web site has it all-  compares the candidate plans, provides analysis, charts, pdfs, news stories, webcasts,  and more.

If you think you know where your candidate stands on health care, universal care, free market health care, socialized medicine and all those other terms thrown around in an election year, you may be surprised by what you read here in this transcript of an interview with  reporter/blogger Trudy Leiberman, who took the press to task on NPR's On the Media a couple of weeks ago. 



In Human Trials

The Houston Chronicle reports on the first human trial of nanoshell technology to basically cook a tumor from the inside out.   The technology has been in development for a decade and quietly has begun a trial in the first human - a patient with head and neck cancer. Nanoshells are tiny glass spheres coated with gold. They are injected into the blood and while most are  washed out of the systems  withwaste products, about 1% accumulate in the tumor because of the nature of blood vessels that feed tumors. The nanosheels can then be heated up with near-infrared light to cook the tumor from the inside out while nearby healthy tissue is left untouched.  Read more the trial in the article here.  Read about tnanoshells on cancerpage here from an interview we did with the researchers  a few years ago. MP3  audio excerpt of Jennifer West interview.


In the Lab

Methadone, the drug used to break addiction to heroine and other opioids, may hold hope for some leukemia patients whose disease has developed a resistence to standard therapies. German researchers, writing in the August issue of the journal Cancer Research, found that methadone  effectively killed leukemia cells that were resistant to multiple chemotherapies and to radiation.  The researchers are now beginning to study their theories in animal models.

 


The weekly cancerpage

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