Solid Tumors

San Antonio, TX—One of the few clinical science symposia at the 2011 CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium focused not on clinical issues but on delineating the economic issues facing oncologists.
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Philadelphia, PA—The new biologic therapy eribulin (Halaven) was recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer. Stephen C. Malamud, MD, Attending Physician, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York City, discussed the benefits and risks associated with this new treatment option at a special session during the meeting.
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Some molecularly targeted agents are proving to be less effective, not more so, when administered earlier in the disease course. Researchers say this is counterintuitive, because advanced disease is associated with treatment refractoriness, and cancer agents will typically perform better in the adjuvant treatment setting than in the metastatic treatment setting.
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In this era of upwardly spiraling healthcare costs, the management of low-risk prostate cancer is changing. Although approximately two thirds of men with a diagnosis of prostate cancer have a low prostate-specific antigen (PSA) value or low-risk disease, approximately 90% of these men receive early intervention, with surgery or with radiation. Findings from a new study from the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System suggest that localized prostate cancer, especially low-risk cancer, can be safely managed by observation alone.

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