November 21st 2024
Currently, chemotherapy remains a common treatment for biliary tract cancers, which have a limited survival rate.
Cardio-Oncology: The Intersection Between Cancer and Cardiovascular Disease
May 26th 2015With the prognosis for many cancers improving, we are seeing an appropriate sharpening of focus on the cardiovascular risks of patients who have survived cancer or are being treated for cancer, as well as a growing recognition of the impact this competing morbidity has on both short- and long-term health outcomes.
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Influence of Cardiotoxic Risk on Treatment Choice in Adult Cancers
May 26th 2015With the explosion of new therapies in cancer care, the risk of each new therapy must be clearly understood prior to making treatment decisions with patients. Data from clinical trials alone are insufficient to educate these treatment choices, and real-world evidence from higher-risk populations should be generated to inform these treatment decisions.
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ASCO Releases A Payment Reform Model
May 21st 2015ASCO says that it's Patient-Centered Oncology Payment model meets the criteria for an Alternative Payment Model as defined by Congress in the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015, which replaced the Sustainable Growth Rate formula.
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Advanced Ovarian Cancer Patients Can Benefit from Pre-surgery Chemotherapy
May 20th 2015Researchers at Cancer Research UK have challenged the current standard of care in advanced ovarian cancer patients. Results of their study, published in Lancet, found that administering chemotherapy prior to surgery can have huge benefits on health outcomes and the patient's quality of life.
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High-Value Screening Recommendations for 5 Common Cancers
May 20th 2015With studies showing that patients overestimate the benefits of cancer screening and are misinformed about the potential harms, the American College of Physicians has issues advice for screening adults with average risk and no symptoms for 5 common cancers: breast, colorectal, ovarian, prostate, and cervical.
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Study Underscores Role of Mutations in TERT Promoter in Cancer
May 19th 2015A Science study found that recurrent mutations in the promoter of the telomerase gene, TERT, could be responsible for overexpression of telomerase in a majority of cancers, thereby sustaining the replicative potential of cancer cells.
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In AJMC, Brookings Authors Discuss Applying New Payment Models to Oncology
May 19th 2015The realm of cancer care remains a holdout in the movement toward value-based payment models, with implications for cost and health outcomes, according to authors of a new article in The American Journal of Managed Care. Authors from the Center for Health Policy at the Brookings Institution assert that new payment models can be adopted by all payer and provider types, with benefits over the traditional fee-for-service model.
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Urologist Evaluates Implications of the Removal of Flawed SEER PSA Data
May 19th 2015Large data sets like SEER need better quality control checks and researchers and clinicians who use these data sets should also consider using secondary data analyses that answer specific research questions. This is the advice of a senior urologist following the removal of the PSA data.
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Dr Peter P. Yu Talks About the Importance of Patient-Centered Oncology Care
May 18th 2015The American Journal of Managed Care's Patient-Centered Oncology Care meeting is an important event for anyone interested in "crossing the chasm" that appears between providers and the rest of the healthcare world, explained Peter P. Yu, MD, president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
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Transforming Oncology Care: Payment and Delivery Reform for Person-Centered Care
The authors examine 4 alternative payment models for oncology care that shift away from fee-for-service and move progressively toward greater bundling, either across providers or across payments.
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Study Associates Experience With Outcomes in Robotic Prostate Cancer Surgery
May 18th 2015The study, conducted by researchers at the Henry Ford Hospital, found that complications associated with robot-assisted radical prostatectomies were higher in low-volume hospitals, with relatively inexperienced staff.
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Campaign Improved Screening Rates for Throat Cancer in Florida
May 15th 2015Raising awareness of the dangers of mouth and throat cancer increased the number of black men in some of Florida's poorest counties who sought screening for the first time, which could improve survival rates through early detection and treatment.
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FDA Provides New Guidance to Manufacturers on Biosimilars
May 14th 2015While the marketing of the first biosimilar to be approved in the US market, Zarxio, has been delayed due to a court order, the FDA is providing guidance to manufacturers to help them effectively navigate the process of product development.
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ASCO Annual Meeting Promises to Deliver on Important Cancer Advances
May 14th 2015Yesterday, the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) lifted the embargo on nearly 5000 abstracts that will be presented at ASCO's 51st Annual Meeting to be held in Chicago, May 29-June 2. The results from a few of the studies were released via a presscast that saw participation by the chair of ASCO's clinical communications committee, the current ASCO president, and the ASCO president-elect.
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Number of Patients on High Cost Specialty Medications Sky-Rocketing
May 13th 2015The prices for new hepatitis C and cancer treatments are driving the cost of prescription drugs to new highs for more Americans, according to a new report, which found that 9 of 10 patients with drug costs of $50,000 or more used specialty drugs.
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