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

Clinical observation leads to lung cancer discovery

Scientist finds super-survivors for lung cancer treatment

2011-03-08
(Press-News.org) AURORA, Colo. (March 7, 2011) - A discovery at University of Colorado Cancer Center shows testing lung cancer on a molecular level can produce new insights into this deadly disease.

Cancer Center member D. Ross Camidge, MD, PhD, director of the thoracic oncology clinical program at University of Colorado Hospital (UCH), turned a chance clinical observation into a new field of discovery in lung cancer. In October 2010, Camidge and colleagues published a study in the New England Journal of Medicine showing more than half of patients with a specific kind of lung cancer respond positively to a treatment that targets the gene that drives their cancer. Fifty-seven percent of patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) positive advanced non-small cell lung cancer responded to a tablet called crizotinib, an investigational ALK inhibitor. Camidge's latest study, published in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology, shows people with ALK-positive lung cancer also have much better outcomes with an established chemotherapy drug called pemetrexed (trade name: alimta).

"We had been running a home-grown clinical trial with pemetrexed in lung cancer when I noticed that some patients were doing astonishingly well on this chemotherapy," said Camidge, associate professor of medical oncology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. "Pemetrexed is not like most other chemotherapies. It can be given for long periods of time, often with little in the way of side-effects. However, when someone is given pemetrexed, on average it only takes three to four months before their cancer starts to grow again. But certain people in this trial were responding to the treatment for a year or more. When we started to test their cancers at the molecular level, almost all of those 'super-survivors' turned out to be ALK-positive. As ALK-positive lung cancer is only present in about one in 20 people, this was clearly not a coincidence."

Finding that ALK positive patients can be super sensitive to pemetrexed may have multiple implications for the 20,000 patients who are thought to develop this subtype of lung cancer every year in the United States.

"To get a new drug, like crizotinib, approved, it is usually compared to some standard chemotherapy. These new results highlight the importance of choosing that comparator carefully, so a beneficial effect is not missed just because the standard treatment does far better in a specific subgroup than it does in an average population," said Camidge. "This information could prevent the current crizotinib development plans from tripping over an unsuspected hurdle and helping to ensure that good new drugs get licensed when they should."

Knowing there is an established drug that could produce results comparable to the latest targeted therapies such as crizotinib may also help ALK-positive patients around the world. "These results suggest that if you are ALK positive and you don't have access to the experimental drug crizotinib then think about trying pemetrexed instead. It will also be very interesting to see if pemetrexed works as well in ALK positive patients after the crizotinib stops working," he said.

The discovery may even help to identify these rare ALK positive patients in the first place.

"Although good responses can occur in other subtypes of lung cancer, if you or someone you know is having a gang-buster response to pemetrexed and they haven't already been tested for ALK – getting tested is probably the next thing to do," said Camidge.

The CU Cancer Center is an international leader in the molecular testing of lung tumors. In early 2008, the center started testing everyone with lung cancer for genetic mutations. Initially they only tested for two mutations, but now they test for 10 different molecular subtypes of lung cancer, including ALK.

"We test all our lung cancer patients at the Cancer Center. We decided early on that it was better to be a leader than a follower in this regard. It's really pleasing to see how some of the breakthroughs we have been involved with are influencing the field. Genetic testing is now slowly becoming more common, both in the community and at other major centers," Camidge said. "We hope our results offer physicians another incentive to order the testing for their patients. At the end of the day, the most important thing is to get the right medication into the right patient at the right time."

Camidge said while this novel discovery identifies pemetrexed as a one of the therapies of choice for this new subtype of lung cancer, it is just the beginning.

"When you break one disease into multiple different diseases at the molecular level, the possibilities are endless. The excitement we are starting to feel at the Cancer Center is comparable to what the original physician-scientists must have felt a hundred years ago when brand new diseases were being described for the very first time."

The University of Colorado's Thoracic Oncology Program is world renowned for its leading edge treatment of lung cancer. The program includes a multidisciplinary team of specialists and subspecialists working together to establish the best treatment plan for each patient. Advanced molecular profiling of a patient's tumor, combined with an extensive array of standard and experimental treatments available through clinical trials has lead to major advances in patient outcomes in the last few years. The program's one-year survival rates for advanced lung cancer consistently run twice as high as the national average. The survival rates at five years run four times higher than the national average.

### University of Colorado is the lead site for the national Lung Cancer Mutation Consortium, the collaboration of 14 of the nation's elite lung cancer programs. The consortium is profiling ten different molecular abnormalities in lung cancer and pairing them with specific experimental treatments over the next few years. For an appointment, please call Tiffany Caudill, intake coordinator for the program at 720-848-0392 or email tiffany.caudill@uch.edu.

About the University of Colorado Cancer Center

The University of Colorado Cancer Center is Colorado's only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center. NCI has given only 40 cancer centers this designation, deeming membership as "the best of the best." Headquartered on the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, the center is a consortium of nine institutions: University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado State University, University of Colorado Hospital, The Children's Hospital, Denver VA, Denver Health, National Jewish Health and Kaiser Permanente Colorado. Together our 400+ members are discovering, developing and delivering breakthroughs in cancer diagnosis, treatment and care to improve the lives of people diagnosed with cancer around the world. Learn more at www.coloradocancercenter.org.

About the University of Colorado Hospital

The University of Colorado Hospital is the Rocky Mountain region's leading academic medical center. It is ranked among the top 10 academic medical centers in the United States by the University HealthSystem Consortium and is ranked as one of the country's best hospitals by U.S. News & World Report. It is best known as an innovator in patient care and often as one of the first hospitals to bring new medicine to patients' bedsides. Based on the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, Colo., the hospital's physicians are affiliated with the University of Colorado School of Medicine, part of the University of Colorado system.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research demonstrates relationship of Texas coastal prairie-pothole wetlands to Galveston Bay

2011-03-08
New research reveals vast tracts of wetlands along the upper Gulf Coast are more hydrologically connected to Galveston Bay and other waters of the U.S. than previously thought, suggesting immediate implications for how they are preserved, managed and regulated, according to Texas AgriLife scientists. "Loss of wetlands closer to traditional navigable waters must be mitigated under the Clean Water Act by creating new wetlands, or preferably by protecting and restoring similar existing wetlands," said Dr. John Jacob, Texas AgriLife Extension Service environmental quality ...

USC California superstorm would be costliest US disaster

2011-03-08
A hurricane-like superstorm expected to hit California once every 200 years would cause devastation to the state's businesses unheard of even in the Great Recession, a USC economist warns. Researchers estimate the total property damage and business interruption costs of the massive rainstorm would be nearly $1 trillion. USC research professor Adam Rose calculated that the lost production of goods and services alone would be $627 billion of the total over five years. Rose, a professor with the USC School of Policy, Planning, and Development, also is the coordinator for ...

Helicobacter pylori infection linked to decreased iron levels in otherwise healthy children, according to research at UTHealth

2011-03-08
HOUSTON-(March 7, 2011)- Children without previous iron deficiencies or anemia who remained infected with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) had significantly lower levels of iron compared to children who had the infection eradicated, according to researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth). "Half of the world's population is infected with H. pylori and most of the individuals are asymptomatically infected, according to several surveys," said Victor Cardenas, M.D., Ph.D., lead investigator of the study and associate professor of epidemiology ...

Evolution drives many plants and animals to be bigger, faster

2011-03-08
Durham, NC —For the vast majority of plants and animals, the 'bigger is better' view of evolution may not be far off the mark, says a new broad-scale study of natural selection. Organisms with bigger bodies or faster growth rates tend to live longer, mate more and produce more offspring, whether they are deer or damselflies, the authors report. Researchers working at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center compiled and reviewed nearly 150 published estimates of natural selection, representing more than 100 species of birds, lizards, snakes, insects and plants. The ...

People would rather let bad things happen than cause them, especially if someone is watching

2011-03-08
People are more comfortable committing sins of omission than commission—letting bad things happen rather than actively causing something bad. A new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, suggests that this is because they know other people will think worse of them if they do something bad than if they let something bad happen. "Omissions and commissions come up relatively frequently in everyday life, and we sometimes puzzle over them," says moral psychologist Peter DeScioli of Brandeis University, who conducted ...

Popular drugs for common male health problems can affect their sexual health

2011-03-08
A new study published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine reveals that, for the first time, 5a-reductase inhibitors commonly used to treat urinary problems in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and found in popular medications to treat hair loss, can produce, persistent erectile dysfunction (ED), depression and loss of libido, even after the medication has been discontinued. Researchers led by Abdulmaged M. Traish, MBA, PhD, of Boston University School of Medicine, examined data reported in various clinical studies from the available literature concerning ...

Stretchable balloon electronics get to the heart of cardiac medicine

Stretchable balloon electronics get to the heart of cardiac medicine
2011-03-08
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Cardiologists may soon be able to place sensitive electronics inside their patients' hearts with minimal invasiveness, enabling more sophisticated and efficient diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias. A team of materials scientists, mechanical and electrical engineers, and physicians has successfully integrated stretchable electronics technology with standard endocardial balloon catheters. Led by John A. Rogers, the Lee J. Flory-Founder Chair in Engineering at Illinois, the team published its work in the March 6 online edition of Nature Materials. The ...

New perspective diminishes racial bias in pain treatment

2011-03-08
MADISON — Years of research show black patients getting less treatment in the American health care system than their white counterparts, but a new study suggests that a quick dose of empathy helps close racial gaps in pain treatment. College students and nurses went to greater lengths to ease the pain of members of their own race in a study led by Brian Drwecki, a psychology graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "I want to be very clear about this: We're not saying health care professionals are racist," Drwecki says. "This is not racism. Racism is ...

DNA better than eyes when counting endangered species

DNA better than eyes when counting endangered species
2011-03-08
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Using genetic methods to count endangered eagles, a group of scientists showed that traditional counting methods can lead to significantly incorrect totals that they believe could adversely affect conservation efforts. Andrew DeWoody, a professor of genetics at Purdue University; Jamie Ivy, population manager at the San Diego Zoo; and Todd Katzner, a research assistant professor at the University of West Virginia, found that visual counts of imperial and white-tailed sea eagles in the Narzum National Nature Reserve of Kazakhstan significantly underestimated ...

Web use doesn't encourage belief in political rumors, but e-mail does

2011-03-08
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Despite the fears of some, a new study suggests that use of the internet in general does not make people more likely to believe political rumors. However, one form of internet communication – e-mail – does seem to have troubling consequences for the spread and belief of rumors. "I think a lot of people will be surprised to learn that using the internet doesn't necessarily promote belief in rumors. Many people seem to think that's self-evident," said R. Kelly Garrett, author of the study and assistant professor of communication at Ohio State University. "The ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tracing gas adsorption on “crowns” of platinum and gold connected by nanotunnels

Rare bird skull from the age of dinosaurs helps illuminate avian evolution

Researchers find high levels of the industrial chemical BTMPS in fentanyl

Decoding fat tissue

Solar and electric-powered homes feel the effects of blackouts differently, according to new research from Stevens

Metal ion implantation and laser direct writing dance together: constructing never-fading physical colors on lithium niobate crystals

High-frequency enhanced ultrafast compressed photography technology (H-CAP) allows microscopic ultrafast movie to appear at a glance

Single-beam optical trap-based surface-enhanced raman scattering optofluidic molecular fingerprint spectroscopy detection system

Removing large brain artery clot, chased with clot-buster shot may improve stroke outcomes

A highly sensitive laser gas sensor based on a four-prong quartz tuning fork

Generation of Terahertz complex vector light fields on a metasurface driven by surface waves

Clot-busting meds may be effective up to 24 hours after initial stroke symptoms

Texas Tech Lab plays key role in potential new pathway to fight viruses

Multi-photon bionic skin realizes high-precision haptic visualization for reconstructive perception

Mitochondria may hold the key to curing diabetes

Researchers explore ketogenic diet’s effects on bipolar disorder among teenagers, young adults

From muscle to memory: new research uses clues from the body to understand signaling in the brain

New study uncovers key differences in allosteric regulation of cAMP receptor proteins in bacteria

Co-located cell types help drive aggressive brain tumors

Social media's double-edged sword: New study links both active and passive use to rising loneliness

An unexpected mechanism regulates the immune response during parasitic infections

Scientists enhance understanding of dinoflagellate cyst dormancy

PREPSOIL promotes soil literacy through education

nTIDE February 2025 Jobs Report: Labor force participation rate for people with disabilities hits an all-time high

Temperamental stars are distorting our view of distant planets

DOE’s Office of Science is now Accepting Applications for Office of Science Graduate Student Research Awards

Twenty years on, biodiversity struggles to take root in restored wetlands

Do embedded counseling services in veterinary education work? A new study says “yes.”

Discovery of unexpected collagen structure could ‘reshape biomedical research’

Changes in US primary care access and capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic

[Press-News.org] Clinical observation leads to lung cancer discovery
Scientist finds super-survivors for lung cancer treatment