. 24/7 Space News .
Three-Way Punch To Lung Cancer

X-ray of a healthy lunch (left) and lung with cancer (right).
by Ed Susman
UPI Correspondent
Philadelphia (UPI) Nov 06, 2006
Doctors said Monday that radiation treatment combined with chemotherapy after lung cancer surgery can double the survival time for patients with cancer that hasn't yet spread through the body. "In this study 47 patients with lung cancer survived for at least five years," said Jean-Yves Douillard, professor and head of medical oncology at Centre Rene Gauducheau, Nantes, France.

The researchers examined outcomes of 830 French patients who underwent treatment for non-small cell lung cancer, scrutinizing whether treatment with chemotherapy, radiation, the combination of both or now follow-up therapy is appropriate in patients who have been detected with early-stage lung cancer.

For patients with N2 lung cancer -- a condition in which the cancer has spread to lymph nodes in the chest wall -- treatment with surgery to remove the main cancer and some of those lymph nodes alone results in a dismal 16.6 percent of patients surviving for five years.

However, in a press briefing at the 48th annual meeting of the American Society of Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology in Philadelphia, Douillard told United Press International that by adding radiation therapy alone, that survival for five years can be increased to more than 20 percent. "Chemotherapy alone will mean about 34 percent of patients can survive five years," he said. "And chemotherapy and radiation gives us a 47.4 percent survival after five years."

That actually adds more than 24 months of survival to these patients who typically died from lung cancer two years after surgery, Douillard said.

"This is the way that we build on success in treating cancer over the years," said Theodore Lawrence, professor and chairman of the department of radiation oncology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who chaired the press briefing. He noted that over the last decade, improvements in treatments and technology have gradually produced longer lasting results in treatment.

Douillard said that, just because the triple combination of surgery, chemotherapy and radiation works in some cancer patients, for other patients that kind of treatment may be too much therapy.

For example in patients with "N0" disease -- lung cancer caught before any of the lymph nodes have been exposed to the cancer -- surgery alone is the best approach. "If we have patients with this disease, and we are finding more and more patients like this through early screening, we can tell them that we are just going to do surgery and they can then go home," Douillard told UPI.

In the trial, 62.3 percent of patients who underwent surgery for N0 lung cancer survived for at least five years. However, Douillard said that treating these patients with chemotherapy and radiation after surgery resulted in reduced survival.

The study reviewed medical records of patients, and because of its retrospective nature, may have missed some key elements that could explain why added treatments aren't successful, Lawrence told UPI.

"Perhaps some of the N0 patients had cancer intruding into the chest wall and received radiation and chemotherapy because doctors were concerned about the extent of the disease," he speculated. "That might mean the doctors were giving more treatment because the case was more serious."

Lawrence said that kind of question should be answered in a prospective, clinical trial. Douillard concurred that his findings need to be confirmed with such a study.

Source: United Press International

Related Links
Centre Rene Gauducheau
Advanced Medical Science For Earth and Beyond



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Researchers Explore Medicine In The Final Frontier
Gainesville FL (SPX) Nov 06, 2006
On Mars, Earth probably looks like a pinprick in the sky, a bluish-green ball some 140 million miles away. But before astronauts can glimpse the view from the red planet, doctors must better understand how to handle medical problems and surgeries in space, University of Florida researchers say.







  • Space Race Realities
  • India Mulls First Manned Space Mission
  • Chinese Businessmen Plan Space Trip
  • Lost In Space No More

  • A Mission To Mars - Part Two
  • Minerals And Mountains On Mars
  • Mars Science Laboratory Shakedown In The High Arctic
  • Russian Dreams Of Reaching Mars First

  • Sea Launch Successfully Delivers Latest XM Radio Satellite To Orbit
  • ATK Receives $17.5 Million Contract For CASTOR 120-R Motors
  • Russian Space Co. To Launch At Least 11 Satellites By 2009
  • MetOp Weather Satellite Reaches Polar Orbit

  • SSTL Signs Contract With Federal Republic Of Nigeria For Supply Of EO Satellite
  • NASA Snow Data Helps Maintain Largest And Oldest Bison Herd
  • Australia And China To Put Eyes In The Sky To Monitor Climate Change
  • Esperanza Fire Captured By Aqua Satellite

  • Making Old Horizons New
  • Scientist Who Found Tenth Planet Discusses The Downgrading Of Pluto
  • New Horizons Spacecraft Snaps Approach Image of the Giant Planet
  • Does The Atmosphere Of Pluto Go Through The Fast-Freeze

  • Stars Churning Away In Large Magellanic Cloud
  • Scientists Crack Open Stellar Evolution
  • Snake On A Galactic Plane
  • NASA Gives WISE Decision The Go Ahead

  • Bizarre Lunar Orbits
  • ISRO To Discuss Manned Mission To Moon
  • Chinese Lunar Orbiter Prototype On Display At Air Show
  • New Russian Spaceship Will Be Able To Fly To Moon - Space Corp

  • Raytheon Next-Gen GPS Receiver Tracks Live Satellite M-code for the First Time
  • Australian Army M113 To Be Upgraded With TALIN 500 Inertial Navigation System
  • Putin Clears Space Pact With India
  • China Starts To Build Own Satellite Navigation System

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement