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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: pancreatic cancer + cancer + pancreatic  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


AFP
Vitamin C injections slow cancer in mice: study
AFP -
Researchers at the National Institutes of Health noted the phenomenon in brain, ovarian and pancreatic cancers, according to findings published in the ...

China Daily
Vitamin C Injections Can Destroy Cancer
TheMedGuru, India -
Previous studies show that higher intake of vitamin C reduce human risk for gastricdefine, esophageal, pancreatic and lung cancer. ...
Vitamin C injections slow tumor growth in mice Xinhua
Injected vitamin C cuts cancer growth ABC Online
Vitamin C jabs 'trigger fightback against cancer' Daily Mail
BBC News - Scotsman
all 93 news articles »
YM BIOSCIENCES REPORTS PHASE II DATA FOR NIMOTUZUMAB IN METASTATIC ...
FOXBusiness - 31 minutes ago
... a Phase II/III trial as a treatment for pancreatic cancer and the phase II study in colorectal cancer reported on in this release. ...YMI
City doc's in ?5m war on cancer
Liverpool Echo, UK -
At present there are no specific drugs to treat acute pancreatitis or chronic pancreatitis, and even fewer to treat pancreatic cancer meaning the prognosis ...
Vitamin C jabs may combat cancer
New Scientist (subscription), UK - 19 minutes ago
The researchers injected immune-deficient mice with cells from three aggressive human cancers ? ovarian and pancreatic tumours, plus a form of brain cancer ...
Family plans road race in memory of Seabrook volunteer
Portsmouth Herald News, NH -
22 of pancreatic cancer. WHAT: Ralph D. Marshall Memorial 5K road race Marshall spent time, on and off the books, keeping the town ball fields in good order ...
I Had the Same Disease. But I Was Lucky.
Washington Post, United States - Aug 2, 2008
Last March, Pausch testified before a congressional subcommittee about his struggle with pancreatic cancer. Holding up a picture of his soon-to-be-widowed ...
Sorting Out Coffee?s Contradictions
New York Times, United States -
Cancer. Panic swept this coffee-dependent nation in 1981 when a Harvard study tied the drink to a higher risk of pancreatic cancer. ...

CBC.ca
Pancreatic cancer: What you need to know
Food Consumer, IL - Jul 27, 2008
By Ben Wasserman SUNDAY July 27, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- Dr. Randy Pausch, Carnegie Mellon Computer Science professor, died of pancreatic cancer July 25. ...
CBS
?Last Lecture? Professor Randy Pausch Dies at 47 New York Times
Randy Pausch Dies of Pancreatic Cancer MedPage Today
University of Virginia - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
all 974 news articles »

Daily Mail
My life was saved by the same knife-wielding robot that treated ...
Daily Mail, UK -
In March this year film star Patrick Swayze had Cyberknife treatment for his pancreatic cancer. Dr Gregory Gagnon, of the Department of Radiation Medicine ...
Source: Google News

Hereditary pancreatitis and the risk of pancreatic cancer. International Hereditary Pancreatitis … -
AB Lowenfels - J Natl Cancer I, 1997 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... EP DiMagno Cigarette Smoking as a Risk Factor for Pancreatic Cancer in Patients ... Home
page, Cancer Res ... A White Paper: The Product of a Pancreas Cancer Think Tank ...

Cyclooxygenase-2 Expression Is Up-Regulated in Human Pancreatic Cancer 1 -
ON Tucker, AJ Dannenberg, EK Yang, F Zhang, L Teng … - Cancer Research, 1999 - AACR
... investigated whether COX-2 was up-regulated in pancreatic cancer. Our data show
that levels of COX-2 are increased in adenocarcinoma of the pancreas and raise ...

Genetic instability in pancreatic cancer and poorly differentiated type of gastric cancer -
HJ Han - Cancer Research, 1993 - AACR
... Genetic instability in pancreatic cancer and poorly ... Department of Biochemistry, Cancer
Institute, Tokyo ... liver, proximal colon, stomach, pancreas, uterine cervix ...

… gemcitabine as first-line therapy for patients with advanced pancreas cancer: a randomized trial -
HA Burris 3rd, MJ Moore, J Andersen, MR Green, ML … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1997 - jco.ascopubs.org
... Gemcitabine With Cisplatin for Metastatic Adenocarcinoma of the Pancreas J. Clin. ...
and AM Flores Gemcitabine Doublets in Advanced Pancreatic Cancer: Should We ...

A Randomized Trial of Chemoradiotherapy and Chemotherapy after Resection of Pancreatic Cancer -
JP Neoptolemos, DD Stocken, H Friess, C Bassi, JA … - The New England Journal of Medicine, 2004 - nejm.org
... J, Andren-Sandberg ?, Ihse I. Recurrence of exocrine pancreatic cancer -- local
or ... S. Recurrence after resection for ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. ...
-

Pancreatitis and the risk of pancreatic cancer. International Pancreatitis Study Group. -
AB Lowenfels, P Maisonneuve, G Cavallini, RW … - N Engl J Med, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Pancreatitis and the risk of pancreatic cancer. International Pancreatitis
Study Group. Lowenfels AB, Maisonneuve P, Cavallini G ...

Increased Risk of Pancreatic Cancer in Melanoma-Prone Kindreds with p16INK4 Mutations -
AM Goldstein, MC Fraser, JP Struewing, CJ … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1995 - content.nejm.org
... Frequency of Multiple Melanomas and Breast and Pancreas Carcinomas in ... JNCI J Natl
Cancer Inst 92: 1260-1266 [Abstract ... Progression Model for Pancreatic Cancer. ...

Telomerase activity is detected in pancreatic cancer but not in benign tumors -
E Hiyama - Cancer Research, 1997 - AACR
... Reverse Transcriptase Messenger RNA in Pancreatic Juice with ... Home page, Cancer Res
Home page S. Kern, R ... White Paper: The Product of a Pancreas Cancer Think Tank ...

Pancreatic cancer: value of dual-phase helical CT in assessing resectability. -
SJ Diehl, KJ Lehmann, M Sadick, R Lachmann, M … - Radiology, 1998 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Radiology. 1998 Feb;206(2):373-8. Click here to read Pancreatic cancer:
value of dual-phase helical CT in assessing resectability. ...

… of transforming growth factor beta isoforms in pancreatic cancer correlates with decreased survival … -
H Friess, Y Yamanaka, M Buchler, M Ebert, HG Beger … - Gastroenterology, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... comparison with the normal pancreas, pancreatic adenocarcinomas showed ... respective
proteins in the cancer cells ... findings show that human pancreatic cancers show ...

Source: Google Scholar

Shining light on pancreatic cancer

Experimental techniques show promise in screening for one of the nation's deadliest diseases

Using novel light-scattering techniques, researchers have found the first evidence that early stage pancreatic cancer causes subtle changes in part of the small intestine. The easily monitored marker may ultimately allow early detection for a disease notorious for having few obvious symptoms, the primary reason pancreatic cancer killed more than 33,000 Americans last year.

The new detection techniques, developed with support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), produce an optic fingerprint from the altered tissue and then enhance the data for a clearer diagnosis.

The researchers scanned tissue samples from 19 people already diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and 32 without the disease. They properly distinguished patients with cancer at an accuracy approaching 100 percent. The clearest results came from patients in the earliest stages of the disease.

Pancreatic cancer is so deadly, in part, because early detection is so difficult. The pancreas can become dangerously inflamed if examined directly, so routine inspections for at-risk patients are usually not an option.

The results build upon prior studies with colon cancer and support the "field effect" hypothesis that suggests initial cancer stages, even pre-cancerous lesions, can cause minute, potentially detectable changes throughout an entire organ. If similar results are found in other organs, the effect could have broad impact in the timely treatment of breast cancer, lung cancer and others.

The team of engineers from Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., and physicians from Evanston-Northwestern Healthcare (ENH), reported the findings in the Aug. 1, 2007, Clinical Cancer Research.

"This novel technology uses light to probe tissue architecture at submicron scale. We are excited about this technology because it enables sensing subtle changes in tissue that otherwise are undetectable by conventional microscopic examination," said Northwestern engineer Vadim Backman, an NSF CAREER awardee who led the development of the new technologies and is a co-author on the research.

By studying tissue extracted from an area adjacent to the pancreas, the researchers were able to screen all 51 patients with little risk of inflammation or other complications.

While clinical use is perhaps three to five years in the future, and ongoing studies are needed to confirm the results, the researchers hope the tests can eventually be done without the biopsy.

"We were so encouraged by the successes with colon cancer that we decided to drive the research in a new direction. With colon cancer, you have time, even years, to treat it successfully. Unfortunately, for pancreatic cancer it's not only critical to detect it early, or even before it becomes cacnerous, but in many cases it is really the only hope," said Leon Esterowitz, the NSF program officer who has been supporting this research.

Because the study uses tissue samples taken from each patient's duodenum, the uppermost section of the small intestine which can be accessed during endoscopies, doctors could potentially generate earlier diagnoses by examining low-risk patients as part of routine examinations.

The next stages of the pancreatic cancer research trials incorporate some examinations that are biopsy-free and use a shoebox-sized fiber-optic version of the new system, a device now being tested during colonoscopies.

"Besides improving on the technology, we need to determine whether other medical conditions including other cancer types or diseases of the pancreas such as chronic pancreatitis or acute pancreatitis can be distinguished with our technology from pancreatic cancer. It is also important for us to validate our prediction rule on a larger number of pancreatic cancer cases as well as different control groups." said co-author Randall Brand, a gastroenterologist from ENH and an expert on pancreatic cancer.

In trials that began before the pancreas research, the researchers saw encouraging results with colon cancer detection in a study of 500 patients. The new approach also predicted, with 100 percent accuracy, polyps in patients diagnosed with a simultaneous colonoscopy.

Because the experimental procedure only scans the outer few centimeters of the colon and does not require the uncomfortable cleansing process required for a colonoscopy, the researchers believe the approach will encourage more people to get screened before they develop symptoms of disease.

The portable system was not used in the pancreatic cancer studies because the probe needs to be modified for the different scope used in endoscopy, but the underlying technology behind all of the examinations is the same. Each patient was scanned using a combination of elastic light-scattering and low-coherence enhanced backscattering techniques developed by Backman and his colleagues over the last five years. The researchers developed the four-dimensional elastic light scattering fingerprinting (4D-ELF) and low-coherence enhanced backscattering spectroscopy (LEBS) systems with the support of seven NSF grants, including a CAREER award.

Whether in a laboratory or in the portable, fiber-optic system, a xenon lamp shines intense, white light through a series of lenses and filters onto the specimen. The light refracts through the outermost layer of tissues and scatters into a spectrograph, a device that separates a beam of white light into its component wavelengths and measures them. An image sensor captures the result for analysis by a computer.

The technological breakthrough is the ability to cause light to penetrate the cells most affected by cancer without hitting deeper unaffected cells and to scan cell structures on the scale of nanometers, smaller than a doctor can see with a microscope.

"Contemporary diagnostic medicine frequently relies on invasive procedures, such as endoscopy, to detect disease. In the fictional world of Star Trek, a doctor is able to make a diagnosis without ever interrogating an organ. Biophotonics shows that this approach may be closer to reality that one might expect," added Backman.

The nanoscale approach allows the researchers to differentiate cancerous or pre-cancerous tissue from normal tissue, even if the specimens look identical under a normal biopsy.

In both studies, the techniques worked regardless of age, tumor size, smoking history or tumor location, although the researchers hope to use the next trial phase to test individuals with serious pancreatic diseases that are not cancer to see if the changes are truly unique to cancer. Eventually, the researchers hope to expand their study to breast cancer, lung cancer and other variations of the disease.

While the new techniques must undergo further study before its effectiveness can be confirmed, the researchers have partnered with American BioOptics to fully develop the technology. In July, American BioOptics received an NSF Small Business Innovation Research grant to further develop the technology for colon cancer screening and ready the system for commercialization.

###

In addition to NSF support, the pancreatic cancer study was also supported by the National Institutes of Health.

Additional co-authors include Vladimir Turzhitsky and Young Kim of Northwestern University and Hemant Roy, Nahla Hasabou, Charles Sturgis, Dhiren Shah and Curtis Hallof Evanston-Northwestern Healthcare.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental research and education across all fields of science and engineering, with an annual budget of $5.58 billion. NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to nearly 1,700 universities and institutions. Each year, NSF receives about 40,000 competitive requests for funding, and makes nearly 10,000 new funding awards. The NSF also awards over $400 million in professional and service contracts yearly.

Receive official NSF news electronically through the e-mail delivery and notification system, MyNSF (formerly the Custom News Service). To subscribe, visit http://www.nsf.gov/mynsf/ and fill in the information under "new users".

Useful NSF Web Sites:
NSF Home Page: http://www.nsf.gov
NSF News: http://www.nsf.gov/news/
For the News Media: http://www.nsf.gov/news/newsroom.jsp
Science and Engineering Statistics: http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/
Awards Searches: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/

 
 
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