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Archive for August 3rd, 2012


Single Incision Laparoscopic Surgery in Treating Patients With Colorectal Disease

Conditions :   Adenomatous Polyp;   Crohn Disease;   Familial Adenomatous Polyposis;   Hereditary Intestinal Polyposis Syndrome;   Recurrent Colon Cancer;   Stage I Colon Cancer;   Stage IIA Colon Cancer;   Stage IIB Colon Cancer;   Stage IIC Colon Cancer;   Stage IIIA Colon Cancer;   Stage IIIB Colon Cancer;   Stage IIIC Colon Cancer Intervention :   Procedure: therapeutic laparoscopic surgery Sponsors :   Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center;   David Renton Recruiting – verified August 2012

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Tissue Study of Bv8/PK-2 Inhibition in Human Cancer

Condition :   Cancer Intervention :   Sponsors :   Rambam Health Care Campus;   Rambam Health Care Campus Not yet recruiting – verified August 2012

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People with Allergies May Have Lower Risk of Brain Tumors

New research adds to the growing body of evidence suggesting that there’s a link between allergies and reduced risk of a serious type of cancer that starts in the brain.

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Research may lead to new approach to detect prostate cancer

An undergraduate student’s technique for detecting certain metabolites in urine samples could lead to a simpler and more accurate way to test for prostate cancer.

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Positively Las Vegas: American Cancer Society kicks of fall campaign

It’s almost time to show your support for breast cancer research. Thursday the American Cancer Society kicked off their fall campaign to make strides against the disease.

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Skin Cancer Screenings In Medford

A doctor’s office on wheels touring more than half of the nation made a stop in Medford on Thursday.

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Cancer hospital welcomes new employees

Cancer Treatment Centers of America at Southeastern Regional Medical Center recently held a weeklong orientation session called “Hope, Joy and Pride” for nearly 200 new employees at the Newnan facility.

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UT Southwestern study suggests new treatment target for deadly brain tumors

A study by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers published online in Nature reveals new insight into why the most common, deadly kind of brain tumor in adults recurs and identifies a potential target for future therapies. Using a genetically engineered mouse model of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the researchers identified a subset of brain tumor cells that appear to be the source of cancer recurrence after therapy with the drug temozolomide. The UT Southwestern Medical Center is home to the Harold C. Simmons Cancer Center.

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Mayo Clinic completes first genome-wide analysis of peripheral T-cell lymphomas

Researchers at Mayo Clinic have completed the world’s first genome-wide sequencing analysis of peripheral T-cell lymphomas, unlocking the genetic secrets of this poorly understood and highly aggressive cancer of the immune system. The researchers, affiliated with Mayo’s Center for Individualized Medicine and Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, found 13 genomic abnormalities that were seen in multiple peripheral T-cell lymphomas. Of particular interest, five of these abnormalities relate to production and behavior of the p53 protein — often called the “guardian of the genome” because of the central role it plays in regulating cell life cycles and, therefore, suppressing cancers.

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Potential Weapon In The Fight Against Cancer

By identifying a key protein that tells certain breast cancer cells when and how to move, researchers at Michigan State University hope to better understand the process by which breast cancer spreads, or metastasizes. When breast cancer metastasizes, cancer cells break away from a primary tumor and move to other organs in the body, including the lungs, liver and brain…

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