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Breaking Research News from sources other than Breastcancer.org

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  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Mouse study links early metastasis to systemic inflammation caused by wound healing

    According to new research conducted in mice by Whitehead Institute scientists, surgery in breast cancer patients, which while often curative, may trigger a systemic immunosuppressive response, allowing the outgrowth of dormant cancer cells at distant sites whose ability to generate tumors had previously been kept in check by the immune system. Taking a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) around the time of surgery may thwart such early metastatic relapse without impeding post-surgical wound healing.

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Endocrine therapy-induced alopecia seen in breast cancer

    (HealthDay)—For patients with breast cancer, endocrine therapy-induced alopecia (EIA) has a pattern that is similar to androgenetic alopecia, according to a study published online April 11 in JAMA Dermatology.


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    The full story on EMFs: Research, dangers, and how to protect yourself - Cancer Tutor


    https://www.cancertutor.com/emf/


  • ksusan
    ksusan Member Posts: 461
    edited April 2018
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    Quality of life predicts mortality in older breast cancer patients


    (HealthDay)—For older women with early-stage breast cancer, measures of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) predict 10-year mortality independently of traditional breast cancer prognostic variables, according to a study published online March 13 in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

    Clark DuMontier, M.D., from the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, and colleagues used medical variables (age, comorbidity), HRQOL measures (10-item Physical Function Index and 5-item Mental Health Index from the Medical Outcomes Study [MOS] 36-item Short-Form Survey and the 8-item Modified MOS Social Support Survey), and breast cancervariables (stage, surgery, chemotherapy, endocrine therapy) to develop a 10-year mortality risk score.

    The researchers found that, compared to a model that included only age, comorbidity, and cancer stage and treatment variables, adding HRQOL variables improved discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.742 from 0.715) and overall performance with good calibration (P = 0.96 from Hosmer-Lemeshow test).

    "These findings suggest that interventions aimed at improving physical function, mental health, and social support might improve both HRQOL and survival," the authors write.

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Breast Cancer More Likely to Spread After Surgery

    http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/10/436/eaan3464?rss=1


  • Dianarose
    Dianarose Member Posts: 1,951
    edited April 2018
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    They are a little late telling us now

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Absolutely Dianarose. : (

  • Amelia01
    Amelia01 Member Posts: 178
    edited April 2018
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    Great .... well there is the argument for adjuvant chemo. I was told that I was "cured" with surgery and the chemo was likened to an "insurance policy". I will be doing aspirin once chemo ends.

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Here is an article on the study. Meloxicam is the favored anti-inflammatory.

    Breast cancers more likely to spread after surgery finds study

    By Dr Ananya Mandal, MDApril 12, 2018

    Breast cancer patients are more likely to experience a return and spread of their cancer within 18 months after a mastectomy or removal of the breast tumour along with healthy breast tissues. The reason for this or this association has been hitherto unexplained. According to a new study from MIT and the Whitehead Institute, the process of healing of the surgical scar after surgery is the cause for spread of the cancer.

    Image Credit: Guschenkova / Shutterstock

    Normally the body's immune system prevents the spread of the cancer from the breast to other tissues in the body. When the healing from the scar is ongoing after a surgery, the immune system is too busy to stop the spread of the cancer cells to other parts of the body. This means that the cancer cells are transported to distant sites in the body and the cancer thus progresses. This study appeared in the latest issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine this Wednesday.

    According to senior author Robert Weinberg, who is a biologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it is not the surgery itself that is leading to this phenomenon but the "post-surgical wound response." This wound response provokes the already disseminated cells to grown and become distant tumours called metastases.

    Weinberg explains that when a surgical scar is healing, the immune system works overtime to send in cells that promote repair, prevent infections and promote blood vessel growth. These mechanisms are also seen when a cancer is growing. As the immune system is busy repairing the surgical wound, he said, the cancer cells fuelled by the very same immune system go unchecked to other parts of the body where they act as seeds for new and dangerous tumours. These are called secondary tumours and are far more dangerous that the primary ones in the breast says Weinberg. For example when the tumours have spread to the brain, lungs or liver, they are more likely to become life threatening sooner than when they are confined to the breast.

    Researchers explain that it was believed earlier that the surgery was causing the spread of the cancer cells to other parts of the body due to handling. But Weinberg explains that along with the tumour a substantial amount of healthy breast tissues are also removed. So it is not possible for the surgery alone to be spreading the cancer. Jordan Krall, the first author of the paper and a former postdoc in the lab of Weinberg says that this is the first evidence of the phenomenon that was happening after mastectomies.

    Taking anti-inflammatory drugs may be one of the solutions suggest the authors. The team of researchers looked at the phenomenon in mice and found that if the patient was given anti-inflammatory drugs such as Meloxicam, the immune system continued to exert its control and prevent the spread of the cancer to other parts of the body. More studies are necessary to see if these drugs are actually successful to a significant extent, but as of now this is an exciting find say researchers. Earlier smaller studies have shown that anti-inflammatory drugs like Ketorolac after mastectomy could prevent spread of the cancer. More research on this is necessary to extrapolate the results in humans say the authors of the study.

    Source:

    http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/10/436/eaan3464?rss=1


  • Sara536
    Sara536 Member Posts: 5,937
    edited April 2018
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    So...we haven't really progressed much beyond bloodletting, have we?

    I wonder if this phenomenon would also occur after any injury or unrelated surgery we may have in the future? So much for plans for revision or even going flat. Should we all go on a regimen of Ketorolac and will that then destroy our livers? Let's all go party while we can!

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Seems that way Sara. There is a topic here on Keterolac


    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/73/topics...


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Axillary ultrasound imaging found to be inferior for detecting lymph node metastases in breast cancer

    https://www.news-medical.net/news/20180417/Axillar...


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Common iron supplements linked to increased levels of a cancer biomarker


  • lisey
    lisey Member Posts: 300
    edited April 2018
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    Marijen, before anyone stops taking Iron (low levels has a link to BC) I suggest you look at your iron pill like I just did. the one I'm taking is "Ferrett's Iron" and contains only Ferrous Fumarate 325 mg. Which appears to NOT cause this issue.

  • Lumpie
    Lumpie Member Posts: 1,553
    edited April 2018
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    Copay Accumulator Programs: What's at Stake for Patients?

    A new type of policy has been introduced that has the potential to put cancer patients at serious financial risk. Co-pay accumulators or accumulator adjustment programs are relatively new policies that some pharmacy benefit managers and insurers are using to prohibit manufacturer copayment cards or other forms of manufacturer assistance from being used to pay down a patient's deductible or out-of-pocket maximum.

    https://www.cancersupportcommunity.org/blog/2018/0...

    {I had not heard about this - except in some government run programs. Troubling for those who count on this type of assistance for expensive cancer care .... }

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    New study maps links between 625 genes and different chemotherapy treatments

    https://www.news-medical.net/news/20180418/New-stu...


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    So now we can't eat fruit?

    Metastatic cancer gorges on fructose in the liver

    April 26, 2018, Duke University

    https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-04-metastatic-cancer-gorges-fructose-liver.html#nRlv

    Monitoring sugar metabolism in liver may be a key to cancer diagnosis

    image April 18, 2016Scientists may have discovered a significant new diagnostic marker for liver cancer, according to a paper published in the April 18 online issue of Nature Cell Biology.

    ouse study reveals what happens in the gut after too much fructose

    image February 6, 2018Princeton University researchers report that in mice, fructose, a sugar found in fruit, is processed mainly in the small intestine, not in the liver as had previously been suspected. Sugary drinks and processed high-sugar ...

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Breast cancer genes a real risk for men, too

    image April 26, 2018(HealthDay)—Few American men are screened for gene mutations that can greatly increase their risk of breast and other types of cancers, a new study reveals.


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Cancer

    Radiotherapy offers new treatment option for liver cancer

    A novel technique that delivers high doses of radiation to tumors while sparing the surrounding normal tissue shows promise as a curative treatment option for patients with early-stage liver cancer, according to a study published ...

    Apr 24, 2018
  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    Changes in breast tissue increase cancer risk for older women

    Researchers in Norway, Switzerland, and the United States have identified age-related differences in breast tissue that contribute to older women's increased risk of developing breast cancer. The findings, published April ...

    Apr 24, 2018

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    wrenn, all I know is, if for instance there are mets in the liver, they can tell if it’s breast cancer, colon cancer, melanoma, or hcc (primary liver cancer). Maybe someone can answer your question but I wonder why you ask? Just curious


  • Roaming_Star
    Roaming_Star Member Posts: 66
    edited April 2018
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    Hi wrenn - the crappy thing about cancer is that a tumour sheds cells and travels through your blood around your body. So when you have a breast cancer tumour it sheds millions of cells every day which circulate all around your body. Most of these cancer cells are found and killed by your immune system. However cancer cells are tricky and can trick your immune system into thinking that they are just regular cells so that they don't get killed off. These cancer cells circulate and set up shop in "mirco-environments" that have favourable growing conditions. Some of the most favourable places in our bodies include bones, liver, brain, and lungs. So you can see that the original cancer has just travelled to another part of the body and started to grow where the immune system was compromised. They usually try and do a biopsy of the new tumour to see how the original cancer has mutated. This informs treatment for metastatic cancer. Hope this explanation is helpful.

  • bluepearl
    bluepearl Member Posts: 133
    edited April 2018
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    We can eat fruit and lots of it. Fruit has fibre. fructose as is put into cereals and processed foods is highly concentrated. THAT you want to avoid. It is a sugar unaccompanied by any fibre or vitamins or minerals. Whole foods are good for you.

  • Roaming_Star
    Roaming_Star Member Posts: 66
    edited April 2018
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    no worries Wrenn - i totally get it! My brain is fried too. You don't know how many appointments I've missed or shown up early or late for. Before cancer i never had this problem. Now i have accept writting things down and actually checking every day what, where and when... The new normal....

  • wintersocks
    wintersocks Member Posts: 434
    edited April 2018
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    https://theconversation.com/why-cancer-cells-go-to...

    Sorry don't know how to make this a proper link

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    They look so sweet when they’re sleeping.


  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 2,181
    edited April 2018
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    wrenn, Femara generic fried my brain.


  • Dianarose
    Dianarose Member Posts: 1,951
    edited April 2018
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    wintersocks- good article. Thanks for sharing. Do you know of any natural anti inflammatory things?

  • wintersocks
    wintersocks Member Posts: 434
    edited April 2018
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    Dianarose

    No I don't to be honest... but I keep hearing about inflammation lately and it's importance in the disease process (not just cancer). I need to research it I think. I thought the article good but a bit scary.