November 21st 2024
Currently, chemotherapy remains a common treatment for biliary tract cancers, which have a limited survival rate.
Alpelisib Provides Promise in Treating Cetuximab-Resistant Head and Neck Cancers
September 16th 2014The results of a phase 1b study, presented at the AACR special conference "Targeting the PI3K-mTOR Network in Cancer," found that Alpelisib could overcome resistance to the anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab, and the two regimens together were quite beneficial.
Read More
To Treat or Not to Treat: The Overdiagnosis Debate
September 15th 2014Rapid advances in detection technology, coupled with an increased awareness about screening, have ignited a debate on overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precancerous lesions. Should physicians use their discretion and implement a "wait-and-watch" approach?
Read More
CMS's Open Payments Database on Schedule for Launch
September 12th 2014Despite reported glitches, CMS plans to launch the database that will provide information on payments for research, gifts, meals, or speaker fees received by providers and teaching hospitals from the pharmaceutical industry.
Read More
Watchful Waiting in Prostate Cancer: Role of Ethnicity
September 10th 2014The retrospective study, conducted at the Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, found that watchful waiting among black men with early stage prostate cancer who had undergone surgery, resulted in a more aggressive disease.
Read More
Global Study Identifies Prediabetes as a Risk Factor for Cancer
September 9th 2014A meta-analysis comprising 16 studies and 891,426 participants from various regions of the world shows that prediabetes increases the risk of cancer by 15%, with differing risks depending on the type of cancer.
Read More
Smoke-Free Homes Now the Overwhelming Norm, Even in Tobacco States, CDC Reports
September 5th 2014Growing up in a smoke-free home is now the overwhelming norm for most Americans, with the share of smoke-free homes nearly doubling in the 20 years that ended in 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said today in a new study. Overall, the prevalence of smoke-free home rules increased from 43 percent during 1992—1993 to 83 percent during 2010—2011, according to the study, which appears in today's Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report, published by CDC.
Read More
What Will Drive the Expected Rise in US Healthcare Spending?
September 4th 2014Yesterday's government report that healthcare spending will start rising faster after a decade of historically slow growth raises questions: Will rising numbers of insured people drive the spending? Or are healthcare costs going up on their own? The answer is likely some of each, based on a look at trends within yesterday's report and a just-released study of spending by commercial health plans, published in The American Journal of Managed Care.
Read More