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

Cancer is a disease of aging, but studies of older adults sorely lacking

2024-04-19
(Press-News.org) A systemic review of the current body of research shows that investigators have inadequately addressed the intersection of aging, health disparities, and cancer outcomes among older adults. This is the conclusion of a new paper published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, and led by Nikesha Gilmore, PhD, a member of Wilmot Cancer Institute at the University of Rochester.

As the population of survivors of cancer 65 and older will likely double in size during the next two decades, the review reveals an urgent need for research to address biases impacting cancer outcomes in older people.

A lack of studies focused on disparities, as well as policies and targeted interventions to improve health equity, “perpetuates cancer inequities and leaves the cancer care system ill-equipped to address the unique needs of the rapidly growing and increasingly diverse older adult cancer population,” the team concluded.

Promoting and conducting this type of research is a central theme at Wilmot: The 27-county Rochester region from which the cancer center draws patients has a high percentage (18%) of people 65 and older, a rate that is higher than state and national averages. The region also has a higher cancer incidence rate than in New York state and the nation.

Gilmore, an assistant professor of Surgery at the University of Rochester Medical Center and member of Wilmot’s Cancer Prevention and Control (CPC) research program, is lead co-author of the report with Shakira J. Grant MBBS, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The review team also included Gilmore’s mentor and senior co-author of the paper Supriya Mohile, MD, and members of the national Cancer and Aging Research Group. The scoping review included articles published between 2016 and 2023; Nancy Lundebjerg, CEO of the American Geriatrics Society, lauded the work.

Internally at URMC, Gilmore is also involved extensively in efforts to promote diversity and train the next generation to identify key areas of future investigation. For example, she launched an immersive student enrichment program called EmREACh, in collaboration with a handful of peers at Wilmot and the CPC. The goal is to remove barriers for underrepresented undergraduate students who are interested in science and medicine by pairing them with mentors, teaching them how to write manuscripts, and introducing them to clinical research and professional development opportunities.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dietary treatment more effective than medicines in IBS

Dietary treatment more effective than medicines in IBS
2024-04-19
Dietary treatment is more effective than medications in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). These are the findings of a study conducted at the University of Gothenburg. With dietary adjustments, more than seven out of ten patients had significantly reduced symptoms. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common diagnosis that causes abdominal pain, gas and abdominal bloating, diarrhea, and constipation, in various combinations and with varying degrees of severity. Treatment often consists of dietary advice such as eating small and frequent meals and avoiding excessive intake of food triggers such as coffee, alcohol and fizzy drinks. Patients may also be given medications to improve specific ...

Silent flight edges closer to take off, according to new research

Silent flight edges closer to take off, according to new research
2024-04-19
The study, published today in Journal of Fluid Mechanics, reveals for the first time how noise is generated and propagated from these engines, technically known as boundary layer ingesting (BLI) ducted fans. BLI ducted fans are similar to the large engines found in modern airplanes but are partially embedded into the plane's main body instead of under the wings. As they ingest air from both the front and from the surface of the airframe, they don't have to work as hard to move the plane, so it burns ...

Why can zebrafish regenerate damaged heart tissue, while other fish species cannot?

Why can zebrafish regenerate damaged heart tissue, while other fish species cannot?
2024-04-19
A heart attack will leave a permanent scar on a human heart, yet other animals, including some fish and amphibians, can clear cardiac scar tissue and regrow damaged muscle as adults. Scientists have sought to figure out how special power works in hopes of advancing medical treatments for human cardiac patients, but the great physiological differences between fish and mammals make such inquiries difficult. So University of Utah biologists, led by assistant professor Jamie Gagnon, tackled the problem ...

Keck School of Medicine of USC orthopaedic surgery chair elected as 2024 AAAS fellow

Keck School of Medicine of USC orthopaedic surgery chair elected as 2024 AAAS fellow
2024-04-19
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) has elected surgeon-researcher Jay Lieberman, MD, chair and professor of orthopaedic surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, among its class of 2024 fellows. The AAAS is the world’s oldest and largest general science organization and the publisher of Science, a top peer-reviewed academic journal. Election as a fellow is a lifetime honor — and one of the AAAS’s highest — signaling extraordinary achievement in the advancement or application of science.  Lieberman ...

Returning rare earth element production to the United States

Returning rare earth element production to the United States
2024-04-18
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — ReElement Technologies on Thursday (April 18) signed an exclusive license to use patented Purdue University technologies to domestically refine and sell minerals critical in manufacturing modern, high-tech products for commercial and industrial use. The license was signed during the Purdue Innovates Startup and Technology Expo 2024 at the Purdue University Memorial Union. Sourcing rare earth and critical battery elements Rare earth elements are foundational essentials in permanent ...

University of Houston Professor Kaushik Rajashekara elected International Fellow of the Engineering Academy of Japan

University of Houston Professor Kaushik Rajashekara elected International Fellow of the Engineering Academy of Japan
2024-04-18
Kaushik Rajashekara, Distinguished Professor of Engineering at the University of Houston Cullen College of Engineering, continues to receive recognition and awards on a global scale. The man who ushered in the era of electric cars, working on the General Motors EV1 in 1995 when he was a Technical Fellow there, has been elected an International Fellow of the Engineering Academy of Japan, recognized for his contributions to power conversion and, of course, electrification of transportation.   According to the academy, Rajashekara’s ...

Solving antibiotic and pesticide resistance with infectious worms

Solving antibiotic and pesticide resistance with infectious worms
2024-04-18
To study how parasites evolve to break the defenses of their hosts, the National Institutes of Health has granted UC Riverside nematologist Simon “Niels” Groen a $1.9 million Outstanding Investigator Award. Roundworm parasites infect humans, livestock, and crop plants. Insights into why certain worms can evade host immune protections could help preempt a ticking time bomb: the decreasing effectiveness of pesticides and antibiotics for infections.     Bacterial, fungal, and parasite resistance to drugs and pesticides is making it harder, and sometimes impossible, to treat common infections ...

Three ORNL scientists elected AAAS Fellows

Three ORNL scientists elected AAAS Fellows
2024-04-18
Three scientists from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have been elected fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, or AAAS, the world’s largest general scientific society and publisher of the Science family of journals. "Keith Kline, Rigoberto Advincula and Takeshi Egami have delivered significant impact for the scientific community," said ORNL Director Stephen Streiffer. "This distinguished honor highlights their commitment, hard work and leadership in their respective fields. I offer my congratulations to them on this well-deserved recognition.” AAAS ...

Rice bioengineers win $1.4 million ARPA-H grant for osteoarthritis research

Rice bioengineers win $1.4 million ARPA-H grant for osteoarthritis research
2024-04-18
HOUSTON – (April 18, 2024) – Bioengineers at Rice University have been awarded $1.4 million as part of a multi-center consortium funded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) to develop strategies for reversing the effects of osteoarthritis. “We’re thrilled to be a part of this collaborative effort to tackle one of the most challenging degenerative joint diseases and develop, test and commercialize solutions for patients,” said Antonios Mikos, the Louis Calder Professor of Chemical Engineering and professor of bioengineering ...

COVID-19 booster immunity lasts much longer than primary series alone, York University-led study shows

2024-04-18
April 18, 2024, TORONTO – Thinking about getting a spring-time booster shot? A new study coming out of York University’s Centre for Disease Modelling in the Faculty of Science shows that immunity after a COVID-19 booster lasts much longer than the primary series alone. These findings are among other, sometimes “unintuitive,” revelations of how factors like age, sex and comorbidities do and don’t affect immune response.  The study’s authors – York Post Doctoral researchers Chapin ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hepatitis B is globally underassessed and undertreated, especially among women and Asian minorities in the West

Efficient stochastic parallel gradient descent training for on-chip optical processors

Liquid crystal-integrated metasurfaces for an active photonic platform

Unraveling the efficiency losses and improving methods in quantum dot-based infrared up-conversion photodetectors

A novel deep proteomic approach unveils molecular signatures affected by aging and resistance training

High-intensity spatial-mode steerable frequency up-converter toward on-chip integration

Study indicates that cancer patients gain important benefits from genome-matched treatments

Gift to UCR clinic aims to assist local unhoused population

Research breakthrough on birth defect affecting brain size

Researchers offer US roadmap to close the carbon cycle

Precipitation may brighten Colorado River’s future

Identifying risks of human flea infestations in plague-endemic areas of Madagascar

Archaea can be picky parasites

EPA underestimates methane emissions from landfills, urban areas

Feathers, cognition and global consumerism in colonial Amazonia

Satellite images of plants’ fluorescence can predict crop yields

Machine learning tool identifies rare, undiagnosed immune disorders through patients’ electronic health records

MD Anderson researcher Sharon Dent elected to prestigious National Academy of Sciences

Nonmotor seizures may be missed in children, teens

Emergency departments frequently miss signs of epilepsy in children

Unraveling the roles of non-coding DNA explains childhood cancer’s resistance to chemotherapy

Marshall University announces new clinical trial studying the effect of ACL reconstruction on return to play in sports

New York State is vulnerable to increasing weather-driven power outages, with vulnerable people in the Bronx, Queens and other parts of New York City being disproportionately affected

Time-restricted eating and high-intensity exercise might work together to improve health

Simulations of agriculture on Mars using pea, carrot and tomato plants suggest that intercropping, growing different crops mixed together, could boost yields in certain conditions

New computer algorithm supercharges climate models and could lead to better predictions of future climate change

These communities are most vulnerable to weather-related power outages in New York State

New strategy could lead to universal, long-lasting flu shot

Mystery behind huge opening in Antarctic sea ice solved

Brain imaging study reveals connections critical to human consciousness

[Press-News.org] Cancer is a disease of aging, but studies of older adults sorely lacking