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Cancercompass News: top stories
CancerCompass is an online community committed to offering people living with cancer a place to receive cancer information and news, share knowledge, and share cancer treatment experiences. To learn more, visit our site today.

Stay Ahead of the Pain
Control the pain both before and after it hurts By Elaine Wacholtz, PhD For Troy Mikell and his wife, Tami, it is business as usual - but it has not always been that way. They work as a team running T & T Transportation Services, LLC , their freight brokerage business. Eighteen months ago, however, life was very different for Troy, who was recovering from bladder cancer. The pain imposed upon him by the disease proved to be both a blessing and a burden, but learning how to manage that pain led to better healing and quicker recovery. It all started on a Friday in the summer of 2004 during an appointment with his urologist who "reassured Tami and me that the blood I had noticed in my urine had a non-cancerous cause," explained Troy....
Soothe Stress, Reap Rewards
Use the mind-body connection to promote peace of mindBy Cheryl A. Sweet Inhaling deeply, Laura Sereyko soaked in the scenery from her rural Maine porch. Snuggling in a wooden swing overlooking Lake Escutarsis, she delighted in a hovering hummingbird and the poignant perfume of pines. She closed her eyes, breathed big, and began transporting herself towards total tranquility. "I'm flying over the lake like a bird, guiding myself with my arms," Laura related. "Suddenly, a wand appears and starts to circle my body with white light - good cells - beginning with my head, all the way down to my feet. Out of my feet come colored lights - bad cancer cells. I may repeat this up to 10 times. After it's over, I take several really deep breaths an...
Laughter: It's a Family Affair!
How to bring humor back into your life By Christine Clifford Beckwith, CSP Three days after undergoing breast cancer surgery in December, '94, I heard the doorbell ring downstairs from my place of rest in my bedroom. "Mom!" screamed my second-grader, Brooks, "More flowers for your breast!" It was a turning point for me, his innocent statement brought laughter to my already developing self-pity. After all, as a young child of 15, I watched my mother crawl into bed with a diagnosis of cancer at the age of 38. In the months that followed my mother's radical mastectomy, my family watched in horror as she sank into a shockingly deep, clinical depression. Eventually, my father left my mother, no longer able to deal with her depression. S...
First U.S. Patient Undergoes Non-invasive Magnetic Resonance-Guided Focused U...
TIRAT CARMEL, Israel -- InSightec Ltd. announced today that the first U.S. patient has been treated in the company's pivotal trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the non-invasive, radiation-free ExAblate(R) Magnetic Resonance-guided Focused Ultrasound (MRgFUS) system as a pain relieving treatment for patients with bone metastases who have failed an initial round of palliative radiation. The ExAblate system was approved to treat women suffering from symptomatic uterine fibroids in 2004. Over 4,000 women have already undergone treatment with ExAblate worldwide. "Pain from tumors that have spread to the bone is the most common kind of pain for cancer patients," said Dr. Kobi Vortman, InSightec's president and...
Allos Therapeutics Initiates Phase 2 Study Of PDX In Patients With Advanced O...
WESTMINSTER, Colo. -- Allos Therapeutics, Inc. today announced the initiation of patient enrollment in a Phase 2, open-label, single-arm, multi-center study of PDX (pralatrexate) in patients with advanced or metastatic relapsed transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the urinary bladder. "We are pleased to broaden our PDX solid tumor development program into an additional indication," said Pablo J. Cagnoni, M.D., Chief Medical Officer of Allos. "TCC of the bladder is an area of high unmet medical need with no agents currently approved for the second-line treatment of advanced or metastatic disease. Given the established role of antifolates in the treatment of bladder cancer, we believe this trial represents an important oppo...
Doctors Give Cancer Patients More Options To Preserve Fertility
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Jennifer Smith always knew she wanted to have a house full of children someday. But two months ago, a diagnosis of breast cancer threw that plan into serious jeopardy. Smith's cancer was aggressive. She had to start chemotherapy right away. And the cancer-killing drugs could damage her ovaries, drastically reducing her chances of ever becoming pregnant. So the 25-year-old Roeland Park, Kan., woman decided to take a chance on an unproven but promising experimental procedure - freezing one of her ovaries. If it's successful, she may be able to have children of her own in the future. Not many years ago, Smith wouldn't have had this option. Her doctor may not have even told her that her fertility was at risk. But...
A Gene Test To Assess Lung Cancer
U.S. and Canadian researchers have taken steps toward developing a gene test to determine whether a patient's lung cancer is especially aggressive or whether radical treatment can be avoided. The researchers reported Sunday that they had analyzed lung cancer tissue from 442 people to confirm that measuring the activity of certain genes could help predict early on which cases may be the most deadly and which had a better prognosis. Knowing whether a person has an aggressive tumor - one likely to spread quickly and uncontrollably beyond the lungs - is critical in determining the type of treatment needed. The researchers said tracking gene activity, along with taking into account clinical factors like the patient's age...
U.S. Hits Weight Marker: 1 In 4 Officially Obese
Americans, who have been getting fatter for decades, reached an unwelcome milestone in a report released Thursday: More than one in four of us are obese. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the number of adults who say they are obese jumped 2 percent between 2005 and 2007--from 23.9 percent in 2005 to 25.6 percent in 2007. That doesn't include people who are overweight. A different CDC survey--a gold-standard project in which researchers actually weigh and measure survey respondents--put the adult obesity rate at 33 percent for adult men and 35 percent for adult women in 2005 and 2006. "It's alarming," said Dr. Robert Kushner, professor of medicine at Northwestern University...
Tomato And Grilled Bread Salad With Halibut
Grills get a workout in the summertime, but they can take a break from hamburgers and hot dogs with today's recipe. The American Heart Association recommends that most people eat at least two servings of fish each week, but many of us - including me - don't always follow that advice. So I started searching for a recipe that would help me meet that goal this summer. Tomato and bread salad is one of my favorite meals, and I thought it might work well to toss some fish into that dish. First, I wanted to find a healthier marinade for fish. The original recipe I liked for halibut included a generous amount of olive oil, but I found that adding some white wine vinegar to a fraction of the oil kept the flavor I wanted while trimming calor...
Cabbage Is Inexpensive And Offers Loads Of Health Benefits
Sweet-and-Sour Crunchy Coleslaw is inexpensive, deliciously filling and nutritious. In tough economic times, fill 'em up with cabbage. Inexpensive yet highly nutritious, the humble cruciferous vegetable is known to reduce the risk of cancer and heart disease. Coleslaw is the perfect delivery vehicle for the vitamin C in cabbage, because the vitamin is readily available in the vegetable's raw form. If you're feeding a crowd, using a shredded and bagged coleslaw mix eliminates the need for chopping. While there are probably as many variations of coleslaw as there are cooks, The Star's Sweet-and-Sour Crunchy Coleslaw is inspired by an upscale version that has been known to make frequent appearances on the Whole Foods salad bar. Wha...
Genenews Launches World's First Blood Test For Colorectal Cancer Screening
TORONTO -- GeneNews Limited, a company focused on developing blood-based biomarker tests for the early detection of diseases and personalized health management, today announced the launch of ColonSentry(TM), the world's first blood-based molecular test for colorectal cancer screening. ColonSentry(TM) is a blood test that assesses a patient's current risk of having colorectal cancer, identifying those in the asymptomatic general population with increased risk who might benefit from further more invasive diagnostic testing such as colonoscopy. This risk stratification approach allows for a more targeted application of colonoscopy which could increase the detection rate of colorectal cancer by as much as 3 fold in an asymptom...
Research Results Update Understanding Of Cervical Cancer Quality Of Care
Current study results from the report, 'Stress, immunity, and cervical cancer: biobehavioral outcomes of a randomized clinical trial,' have been published. According to recent research from the United States, "Cancer diagnosis and treatment imparts chronic stressors affecting quality of life (QOL) and basic physiology. However, the capacity to increase survival by improving QOL is controversial." "Patients with cervical cancer, in particular, have severely compromised QOL, providing a population well-suited for the evaluation of novel psychosocial interventions and the exploration of mechanisms by which modulation of the psychoneuroimmune axis might result in improved clinical outcomes. A randomized clinical trial was conducted in cervic...
Hope For Pregnant Cancer Patients
Something felt wrong in Leila Sadat's right breast. The Washington University law professor tried to ignore the nagging worry about a hard spot that mammograms did not detect. Doctors thought it was nothing more serious than a blocked milk duct. It couldn't be cancer. Sadat was pregnant. As many as one in 1,000 pregnant women will be diagnosed with cancer. Doctors expect that number to rise as more women delay childbirth into their 30s and 40s, because cancer risk increases with age. Pregnant women with cancer must make life-and-death decisions times two. "That tension is more poignant because here it's my life versus my baby's life," said Dr. James Bartelsmeyer, director of maternal-fetal medicine at St. John's Mercy M...
Public Service Announcements Not Getting Message Across
Breast cancer specialists were alarmed last year when research from the National Cancer Institute revealed mammography use had dropped so sharply that doctors feared a rise in invasive cancers. Clearly, some women were not getting the message that mammograms save lives. They had not been reached by all the walkathons and pink awareness bows affixed on everything from T-shirts to cans of soup. The answer? Perhaps more messages. "We're talking about doing some public service announcements," said Dr. Clare Bradley, executive vice president of IPRO, a health quality organization in Lake Success and chair of a "strike force" on mammography for the American Cancer Society. Awareness about breast cancer screening may not be th...
Testicular Cancer Options Debated: Research Supports 1 Dose Of Chemo After Su...
Testicular cancer is a rare beast. It's relatively easy to detect. And it's very treatable. It's also one of the few cancers that can be cured. Yet specialists still debate the best way to continue treatment once the cancerous testicle is surgically removed. "If you ask a surgeon, they might say chemotherapy or a radiologist might say radiation and a medical oncologist will then say let's do either one round of chemotherapy or just observation," said Gil Rodrigues, a medical oncologist with the Milwaukee-area Oncology Alliance. "But the real issue, since we know it's curable, is how can we minimize toxicity during treatment," he said. At a meeting of cancer specialists last month in Chicago, researchers showe...

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