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

Maybe we shouldn’t even call low-grade prostate cancer “cancer”

2024-10-01
(Press-News.org) A new paper in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that patients may benefit if doctors stop calling certain early-stage changes to the prostate “cancer” at all.

Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death worldwide in men, but far more patients are diagnosed than die of the disease. In 2022, there were nearly 1.5 million cases of prostate cancer, but only 400,000 deaths. Low-grade prostate cancer, commonly known as GG1 among physicians, virtually never metastasizes or causes symptoms. Some medical researchers have wondered recently if it would be a benefit to public health to call GG1 something other than cancer.

To further this discussion, researchers convened an international symposium with participants from multiple fields, including patient advocacy. Key considerations included the very high rate of GG1 detectable on autopsy studies, the focus of contemporary diagnostic tests on detecting higher grade cancers, the benefits of relegating GG1 to something more like “incidentaloma” status, the adverse health effects of overtreatment, and the psychological burden of a cancer diagnosis for patients.

Those who convened at the meeting emphasized that while GG1is common among older men, it should not be considered normal. Patients with this condition should continue to monitor it with their physicians, according to investigators.

One concern is that patients may not bother to monitor the progression of the condition if their doctor doesn’t use the word “cancer” to explain what’s going on. Ultimately, those involved in the discussion emphasized, the goal of prostate cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment is to bring down mortality rates while also reducing the harms of overdiagnosis and overtreatment. Matthew Cooperberg, the principal investigator involved with the symposium, believes that a reconsideration of nomenclature may be a good way to help bring this about.

“The word ‘cancer’ has resonated with patients for millennia as a condition associated with metastasis and mortality,” explained Cooperberg. “We are now finding exceptionally common cellular changes in the prostate that in some cases presage development of aggressive cancer but in most do not. We absolutely need to monitor these abnormalities no matter what we label them, but patients should not be burdened with a cancer diagnosis if what we see has zero capacity to spread or to kill.”

The paper, “When is prostate cancer really cancer?” is available (at midnight on October 1st) at https://academic.oup.com/jnci/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/jnci/djae200."

Direct correspondence to: 
Matthew Cooperberg
Departments of Urology and Epidemiology & Biostatistics
University of California, San Francisco
550 16th St., Box 1695
San Francisco, CA 94143
matthew.cooperberg@ucsf.edu

To request a copy of the paper, please contact:
Daniel Luzer 
daniel.luzer@oup.com

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

‘Cheeky’ discovery allows scientists to estimate your risk of dying using cells found in the mouth

2024-10-01
We don’t all age at the same rate. But while some supercentenarians may age exceptionally slowly due to winning the genetics jackpot, a plethora of behavioral and lifestyle factors are known to speed up aging, including stress, poor sleep, poor nutrition, smoking, and alcohol. Since such environmental effects get imprinted on our genome in the form of epigenetic marks, it is possible to quantify molecular aging by characterizing the epigenome at prognostic genomic sites. Over the past decade, scientists have developed several such ‘epigenetic clocks’, calibrated against chronological age and various lifestyle factors across large ...

ChatGPT shows human-level assessment of brain tumor MRI reports

ChatGPT shows human-level assessment of brain tumor MRI reports
2024-10-01
As artificial intelligence advances, its uses and capabilities in real-world applications continue to reach new heights that may even surpass human expertise. In the field of radiology, where a correct diagnosis is crucial to ensure proper patient care, large language models, such as ChatGPT, could improve accuracy or at least offer a good second opinion. To test its potential, graduate student Yasuhito Mitsuyama and Associate Professor Daiju Ueda’s team at Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate ...

Promising TB therapy safe for patients with HIV

Promising TB therapy safe for patients with HIV
2024-10-01
SAN ANTONIO (October 1, 2024) – A therapy showing promise to help control tuberculosis (TB) does not interfere with combined antiretroviral therapy (cART), according to research by Texas Biomedical Research Institute (Texas Biomed).   “This is an important hurdle that this host-directed therapy had to clear in order to help patients battling both HIV and TB,” said Texas Biomed Professor Smriti Mehra, Ph.D., who led the study recently published in the peer-reviewed journal JCI Insight. TB is responsible for more than 1.3 million deaths worldwide every year. Dr. Mehra ...

American Academy of Pediatrics examines the impact of school expulsion and recommends ways to create supportive learning environments for all students

2024-10-01
Media Contacts: Alex Hulvalchick, 630-626-6282 Lisa Robinson, 630-626-6084, lrobinson@aap.org American Academy of Pediatrics Examines the Impact of School Expulsion and Recommends Ways to Create Supportive Learning Environments for All Students  Updated policy statement on school suspension to be released during the AAP 2024 National Conference & Exhibition in Orlando. ORLANDO, Fla.--Suspending or expelling a student is one of the most severe punishments a school can impose on a student – and it can have lifelong, devastating consequences. ...

Most pregnant people got vaccinated for COVID-19 in 2022

2024-10-01
A study of more than 28,000 pregnancies from 2022 has found that the majority of pregnant people received the COVID-19 vaccine during its initial release. The study, co-led by McMaster University and the University of British Columbia, used data from ICES, an independent, not-for-profit research institute, to provide insight into vaccination rates among one of the groups most vulnerable to health complications caused by COVID-19. The research, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) ...

Coral reef destruction a threat to human rights

Coral reef destruction a threat to human rights
2024-10-01
A human rights-based approach to coral reef protection could ensure governments are held to account for safeguarding marine ecosystems and empower local and Indigenous communities to demand sustainable solutions and climate justice, a new study suggests. An estimated one billion people rely on healthy coral reefs globally for food security, coastal protection and income from tourism and other services. If reefs and their ecosystems are lost, the impact on human health and economic wellbeing would be catastrophic. Lead ...

Tongan volcanic eruption triggered by explosion as big as ‘five underground nuclear bombs’

Tongan volcanic eruption triggered by explosion as big as ‘five underground nuclear bombs’
2024-10-01
The Hunga Tonga underwater volcano was one of the largest volcanic eruptions in history, and now, two years later, new research from The Australian National University (ANU) has revealed its main trigger. Until now, the cause of the cataclysmic event has remained largely a mystery to the scientific community, yet a student-led team of ANU seismologists has been able to shed new light on the natural explosion that initiated the event. The student researchers analysed the climactic event’s noisy but valuable seismic ...

Syrian hamsters reveal genetic secret to hibernation

Syrian hamsters reveal genetic secret to hibernation
2024-10-01
A gene that limits cellular damage could be the key to surviving prolonged cold exposure. Researchers have identified a gene that enables mammalian cells to survive for long periods at extremely low temperature, which animals experience during hibernation. Body temperatures below 10 degrees Celsius (°C) swiftly prove fatal for humans and many other mammals, because prolonged cold stress causes cells to accumulate damaging free radicals—in particular lipid peroxide radicals—resulting in cell death and organ failure. But a few mammalian species can survive cold stress by hibernating. Hibernation in many small mammals involves ...

Tracking microplastics: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researcher helps discover how microplastics move for better storm water management

Tracking microplastics: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researcher helps discover how microplastics move for better storm water management
2024-10-01
Microplastic pollution is a significant environmental problem that harms animals and people and affects ecosystems worldwide. These tiny pieces of plastic, smaller than five millimeters, are pushed by wind and water to move around the globe. Nasrin Alamdari, an assistant professor in the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, is on a mission to learn more about microplastics and how they move. In research published in Environmental Pollution, she helped examine how shape, size and density affect the speed at which ...

The Lancet Psychiatry: Conversion practice linked to greater risk of mental health symptoms, surveys of LGBTQ+ people in the USA suggest

2024-09-30
Analysis of questionnaires completed by 4,426 LGBTQ+ people in the USA suggests undergoing conversion practice targeting gender identity or sexual orientation is linked with symptoms of depression, PTSD and suicidal thoughts or attempts. Cisgender and transgender participants also had more severe symptoms of depression and PTSD if they had undergone conversion practice. Cisgender participants subjected to both types of conversion practice had a greater risk of suicidal thoughts and attempts than transgender participants – but mental health symptoms were more severe for transgender people overall, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Theory-breaking extremely fast-growing black hole

ŌURA and National University of Singapore open Joint Lab to advance research in personalized preventive health

Hope for smarter lung cancer care

Singapore scientists discover lung cancer's "bodyguard system" - and how to disarm it

Bacteria use wrapping flagella to tunnel through microscopic passages

New critique prompts correction of high-profile Yellowstone aspen study, highlighting challenges in measuring ecosystem response to wolf reintroduction

Stroke survivors miss critical treatment, face greater disability due to systemic transfer delays

Delayed stroke care linked to increased disability risk

Long term use of anti-acid drugs may not increase stomach cancer risk

Non-monetary 'honor-based' incentives linked to increased blood donations

Natural ovulation as effective as hormones before IVF embryo transfer

Major clinical trial provides definitive evidence of impacts of steroid treatment on severe brain infection

Low vitamin D levels shown to raise risk of hospitalization with potentially fatal respiratory tract infections by 33%

Diagnoses of major conditions failing to recover since the pandemic

Scientists solve 66 million-year-old mystery of how Earth’s greenhouse age ended

Red light therapy shows promise for protecting football players’ brains

Trees — not grass and other greenery — associated with lower heart disease risk in cities

Chemical Insights scientist receives Achievement Award from the Society of Toxicology

Breakthrough organic crystalline material repairs itself in extreme cold temperatures, unlocking new possibilities for space and deep-sea technologies

Scientists discover novel immune ‘traffic controller’ hijacked by virus

When tropical oceans were oxygen oases

Positive interactions dominate among marine microbes, six-year study reveals

Safeguarding the Winter Olympics-Paralympics against climate change

Most would recommend RSV immunizations for older and pregnant people

Donated blood has a shelf life. A new test tracks how it's aging

Stroke during pregnancy, postpartum associated with more illness, job status later

American Meteorological Society announces new executive director

People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely

Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest

General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion

[Press-News.org] Maybe we shouldn’t even call low-grade prostate cancer “cancer”