PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stereotactic radiotherapy slows pancreatic cancer progression for inoperable patients

2010-10-30
(Press-News.org) DETROIT – For pancreatic cancer patients unable to undergo surgery – the only known cure for this form of cancer – a highly targeted cancer radiation therapy may help slow cancer progression and lessen disease symptoms, according to researchers at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

Called stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), the study found it was able to delay pancreatic cancer progression locally, on average, by almost six months.

While, on average, the patients in the study lived about 10 months, one-third lived more than a year.

Without any treatment – surgery, chemotherapy or radiation therapy – most pancreatic cancer patients only live about four to six months.

"Our research establishes stereotactic body radiotherapy as a reasonable treatment option for patients who can't have surgery or aren't candidates for chemotherapy," says study lead author Michael Haley, D.O., a resident in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Henry Ford Hospital.

"While it's not a curative therapy, it does seem to allow some progression-free survival benefit with minimal side-effects for patients. Ultimately, we're able to provide a treatment to patients who don't have any other options other than a traditionally prolonged course of radiation, which may not be as effective, and possibly has more side effects."

Says study co-author Munther Ajlouni, M.D., senior staff physician in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Henry Ford: "SBRT allows us to effectively treat patients who are unable to tolerate prolonged, aggressive therapy within a short period of time and with minimal toxicity."

The study will be presented Nov. 2 during the poster session at the 52nd annual American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) meeting in San Diego. Results also are online in the November issue of the International Journal of Radiation Oncology.

According to the National Cancer Institute, in 2010 there will be an estimated 43,140 new cases of pancreatic cancer, and approximately 36,800 will die from the disease. Risk factors for pancreatic cancer include smoking, diabetes, obesity, family history of the disease and pancreatitis. Most people diagnosed with the disease are older than 65.

Surgery is the only known cure for resectable pancreatic cancer, where the cancer is localized to the pancreas and hasn't spread.

It is estimated that only 20 percent of pancreatic cancer patients have their tumors present with localized disease amendable to surgical removal. A select number of those patients, however, are not candidates for surgery due to having other co-morbidities such as heart disease. This leaves only chemotherapy and radiation, or a combination of the two, available for treatment.

SBRT is a method of giving radiation that can be highly targeted to the tumor, sparing the normal tissue around it. It also provides a higher dose of radiation, meaning patients have fewer treatments. It is most commonly used for lung cancer patients, but has been used for liver and brain tumors as well.

The Henry Ford study looked to determine if SBRT was a viable option to slow cancer progression in medically inoperable patients with potentially resectable pancreatic cancer.

The study included 12 medically inoperable patients with stage I or II pancreatic cancer. The median patient age was 83. Patients received between three and seven SBRT treatments.

Among those patients whose cancer spread, SBRT was able to slow cancer progression for five to six months. Once the patients' cancer started to progress, they lived about 2.5 months. "This may indicate that this slowing of the progression of disease accomplished by SBRT may modestly increase overall life span," notes Dr. Haley.

A few patients reported some minor side effects from treatment, including fatigue, loss of appetite and weakness. Two patients developed gastric ulcers, but both recovered.

### Study funding: Henry Ford Hospital

Along with Dr. Haley and Dr. Ajlouni, Henry Ford study co-authors are Samuel Ryu, M.D.; Indrin Chetty, Ph.D.; Teamour Nurushev, Ph.D.; and Benjamin Movsas, M.D.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Women's unique connection to nature is explored in special issue of Ecopsychology

Womens unique connection to nature is explored in special issue of Ecopsychology
2010-10-30
New Rochelle, NY, October 29, 2010—Women experience and interact with their natural surroundings in ways that differ from men. The way in which those differences affect a woman's sense of self, body image, and drive to protect and preserve the environment are explored in a thought-provoking special issue of Ecopsychology, a peer-reviewed, online journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The entire issue is available free online at www.liebertpub.com/eco Guest Editors Britain Scott, PhD, from the University of St. Thomas (St. Paul, MN) and Lisa ...

Parents' effort key to child's educational performance

2010-10-30
A new study by researchers at the University of Leicester and University of Leeds has concluded that parents' efforts towards their child's educational achievement is crucial – playing a more significant role than that of the school or child. This research by Professor Gianni De Fraja and Tania Oliveira, both in the Economics Department at the University of Leicester and Luisa Zanchi, at the Leeds University Business School, has been published in the latest issue of the MIT based Review of Economics and Statistics. The researchers found that parents' effort is more ...

Wartime urologic injuries require different mindset

Wartime urologic injuries require different mindset
2010-10-30
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Saving a soldier's life takes precedence over treating traumatic urologic injuries on the battlefield, a Medical College of Georgia researcher says. Injuries to the bladder, ureters, kidneys and external genitalia often require complex surgical treatment, said Dr. Arthur Smith, an MCG urologist. But during wartime, when those wounds are often combined with other life-threatening injuries, their treatment becomes secondary to lifesaving tactics. Smith made his comments at a lecture, Revised Management Strategies for Urologic Injuries During Wartime, at ...

Women with anorexia nervosa more likely to have unplanned pregnancies

2010-10-30
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – A new study by University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Norwegian researchers has found that women with anorexia nervosa are much more likely to have both unplanned pregnancies and induced abortions than women who don't have the serious eating disorder. These results may be driven by a mistaken belief among women with anorexia that they can't get pregnant because they are either not having menstrual periods at all or are having irregular periods, said Cynthia M. Bulik, PhD, the study's lead author and director of the UNC Eating Disorders Program. "Anorexia ...

Is the shape of a genome as important as its content?

Is the shape of a genome as important as its content?
2010-10-30
If there is one thing that recent advances in genomics have revealed, it is that our genes are interrelated, "chattering" to each other across separate chromosomes and vast stretches of DNA. According to researchers at The Wistar Institute, many of these complex associations may be explained in part by the three-dimensional structure of the entire genome. A given cell's DNA spends most of its active lifetime in a tangled clump of chromosomes, which positions groups of related genes near to each other and exposes them to the cell's gene-controlling machinery. This structure, ...

Scientists seek urgent treatment for fatal sleeping sickness

Scientists seek urgent treatment for fatal sleeping sickness
2010-10-30
Urgently-needed new treatment for a parasitic disease is being investigated in research led at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland. Human African Trypanosomiasis, also known as sleeping sickness, affects between 50,000 and 70,000 people in Africa and South America. It is transmitted through the bite of the tsetse fly and attacks the nervous system and brain, leading to fever, headaches and disturbed sleep patterns. Without treatment, the disease is fatal but a new drug to tackle it is being developed in a project led at Strathclyde, with partners from ...

Raising giant insects to unravel ancient oxygen

2010-10-30
Boulder, CO, USA - The giant dragonflies of ancient Earth with wingspans of up to 70 centimeters (28 inches) are generally attributed to higher oxygen atmospheric levels in the atmosphere in the past. New experiments in raising modern insects in various oxygen-enriched atmospheres have confirmed that dragonflies grow bigger with more oxygen, or hyperoxia. However, not all insects were larger when oxygen was higher in the past. For instance, the largest cockroaches ever are skittering around today. The question becomes how and why do different groups respond to changes ...

Troubled islands: Hurricanes, oil spill and sea level rise

2010-10-30
Boulder, CO, USA - The islands flanking the outlet of the Mississippi River are not only facing losses due to sea level rise and local subsidence, according to one study, but new unknown impacts from oil recovery operations, say researchers working on another project. Both will be presenting their work on Nov. 1 and 2 at the meeting of the Geological Society of American in Denver. Some islands could disappear entirely in coming decades, exposing huge swaths of marshland to the waves of the open sea. On one side of the Mississippi River outlet, to the east of the river ...

Newly discovered gene enables fish to 'disappear'

Newly discovered gene enables fish to disappear
2010-10-30
Researchers led by Vanderbilt's Roger Cone, Ph.D., have discovered a new member of a gene family that has powerful influences on pigmentation and the regulation of body weight. The gene is the third member of the agouti family. Two agouti genes have been identified previously in humans. One helps determine skin and hair color, and the other may play an important role in obesity and diabetes. The new gene, called agrp2, has been found exclusively in bony fish, including zebrafish, trout and salmon. The protein it encodes enables fish to change color dramatically to match ...

Animal evolution springs from 'Snowball Earth'

Animal evolution springs from Snowball Earth
2010-10-30
Biogeochemists have found new evidence linking "Snowball Earth" glacial events to the rise of early animals. The research was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Study results appear in this week's issue of the journal Nature. The controversial Snowball Earth hypothesis posits that, on several occasions, the Earth was covered from pole to pole by a thick sheet of ice lasting for millions of years. These glaciations, the most severe in Earth history, occurred from 750 to 580 million years ago. In the aftermath, the researchers discovered, the oceans ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New white paper on rebuilding trust at work amid AI-driven change and burnout published by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

How to motivate collective action on climate

Healing Hearts, Changing Minds awards $566,260 to seven projects to advance psychedelic-assisted end-of-life care

A novel rolling driving principle-enabled linear actuator for bidirectional smooth motion

Prognostic nutritional index predicts outcomes in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with atezolizumab and bevacizumab

Mountain snow and water forecasting tool developed by WSU researchers

Training the next generation of translational virologists: Reflections from the 2025 Global Virus Network Short Course

Should companies replace human workers with robots? New study takes a closer look

New study proposes global framework to safeguard world’s most vulnerable regions amid climate crisis

Interventions that promote collective climate action

Boston University receives grant from the Michael J. Fox foundation to study mechanisms of gait improvement in Parkinson’s disease

Trust in PhD advisor predicts a good grad school experience

Engineering and the quest for peace

Insilico Medicine and Qilu Pharmaceutical reach near $120 million drug development collaboration to accelerate novel cardiometabolic therapies

Chungnam National University develops AI model to accelerate defect-based material design

Identification of the central pathological substrate of bipolar disorder as paraventricular thalamic nucleus

A new route to synthesize multiple functionalized carbon nanohoops

Integrated smart contact lens technology for real-time intraocular pressure monitoring

New Boston University study identifies CTE as cause of dementia

Applied physics researchers explore impact of mathematically structured sound to selectively interact with cells.

New study redefines our understanding of how memory works

The most prominent trend in Holocaust commemoration worldwide is a growing focus on the rescuers of Jews

Prenatal exposure to air pollution is associated with lower cognitive performance in early childhood

AI learns better when it talks to itself

96% accurate footprint tracker for tiny mammals could help reveal ecosystem health

Balancing comfort and sustainability with climate-tailored housing

Not just sweet: the sugar branches that shape the brain

Spectral slimming for single-nanoparticle plasmons

Exploring the scientific connotation of the medicinal properties of toad venom (Chansu) — 'dispersing fire stagnation and opening orifices to awaken the spirit' — from the microscopic world of 5-HTR d

How early-career English language teachers can grow professionally, despite all odds

[Press-News.org] Stereotactic radiotherapy slows pancreatic cancer progression for inoperable patients