Amercian River Messenger
Like Us On Facebook Follow Us On Twitter
Founded 2006
Serving Citrus Heights, Fair Oaks, Orangevale, Gold River, Rancho Cordova, Carmichael & Sacramento County
 
  Home Community Finance Employment Your Home Your Money Your Kids Your Health  
  Business Education Politics Police & Fire Veterans' News Real Estate Consumer News Taxes  
  Church Food Recipes Gardening Car Care Fashion Beauty Pets  
  Lifestyles Sports Feature Writers Entertainment Environment Human Interest Technology Travel  
 
Apple iTunesLinksynergy Click here to find the right student loan for you
California Job Journal
American River Messenger and Rainbow Rewards
As Seen On TV
Canvas on Demand
Cabela's
Famous Footwear
Sunrise Marketplace

Your Health

Researchers Work To Shrink Childhood Cancer Survival Gap

Posted 12/8/2011

Researchers are working to further raise childhood cancer survival rates while creating safer, more effective therapies to treat the disease. St. Jude
Researchers are working to further raise childhood cancer survival rates while creating safer, more effective therapies to treat the disease. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital has developed protocols that helped push overall survival rates for childhood cancer from 20 percent when the hospital opened to almost 80 percent today.

(NAPSI)—The treatment of childhood cancer is one of the great success stories of modern medicine. A few decades ago, only 20 percent of children survived the disease. Today, overall survival rates approach 80 percent. Yet cancer remains the leading cause of death from disease in U.S. children older than 1 year of age, and some types of pediatric cancer continue to have poor survival rates.

For researchers, the aim now is to close the survival gap while creating safer, more effective therapies to treat the disease. A further increase in survival rates will require combining the latest technologies with new approaches to drug discovery and innovative clinical trials.

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, a time dedicated to highlighting efforts to reduce cancer’s toll on children. At St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, the fight against the disease occurs year round.

“Our goal is to cure more children, and in the process, find new treatments that have less side effects and a greater effectiveness for all children fighting cancer,” said Dr. William E. Evans, St. Jude director and CEO.

St. Jude scientists are making progress. In a recent study, St. Jude investigators employed improved risk-adjusted chemotherapy and sophisticated patient monitoring to dramatically boost survival of older teenage patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), a type of blood cancer. Historically, older adolescents with ALL fared far worse than younger children with the disease. The same protocol also showed that cranial irradiation, once regarded a standard treatment for childhood ALL, can be omitted, thus sparing patients from devastating side effects and enhancing their quality of life. The treatment regimen resulted in a 90 percent cure rate, the highest rate ever reported for the disease.

Innovations in bone marrow transplantation are helping close the survival gap by offering new hope to children with high-risk forms of ALL and acute myeloid leukemia, a cancer of certain white blood cells. Using bone marrow transplantation, St. Jude doctors more than doubled survival of such patients, who were not cured using intensive chemotherapy. Patients benefited from improved infection control, more sophisticated transplant donor selection and other treatment advances.

Other St. Jude researchers are leading international efforts to advance understanding of the biology driving several common childhood brain tumors. The work includes clinical trials to translate that understanding into pioneering therapies.

To speed progress against a wide range of pediatric cancers, St. Jude researchers are collaborating with Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis to decode the genomes of more than 600 childhood cancer patients. The Pediatric Cancer Genome Project is an unprecedented effort to identify the genetic changes that give rise to some of the world’s deadliest childhood cancers. The project has already produced a novel computer tool for finding the genetic missteps that fuel cancer.

“Our goals are ambitious, but we are hopeful that by employing science, technology, new computational approaches and scientist-doctor collaborations, we can make more strides against childhood cancer,” Evans said.

Funnies Extra
Pay Legal Ads Online
Messenger Publishing Group

Advertise With Us
About the Messenger
Get Home Delivery
Classified Advertising
Read Letters to the Editor
Previous Issues

Front Page Sports
MBK Homes

Legal Advertising Hotline
Call Dan Direct at
916-532-2113
dan@carmichaeltimes.com
Legal Advertising Rates

 



Top Stories
 

California News
 



About The Messenger | Copyright Notice
American River Messenger | Paul V. Scholl, Publisher
7405 Greenback Lane, #129 | Citrus Heights, CA 95610-5603 | Telephone: 916-773-1111 | Fax Line 916-773-2999
Email: publisher@AmericanRiverMessenger.com | Site Designed and Hosted by TheSiteBarn.com
ISSN#: 1948-1969

Like Us On Facebook Follow Us On Twitter