Learn More About Chemobrain

Posted by Kate Murphy on April 3rd, 2011

Having trouble remembering? Does your thinking seem fuzzy? Even years after chemotherapy, does it seem like you can’t focus and are wandering around in a fog?

Learn more about cancer treatments and thinking, memory, and attention during a free CancerCare telephone workshop.

  • The Ninth Annual Cancer Survivorship Series: Living With, Through and Beyond Cancer
  • Part I: Chemobrain: The Impact of Cancer Treatments on Memory, Thinking and Attention
  • April 12, 2011
  • 1:30 to 2:30 (Eastern)

Registration is free, but you must sign up. In addition to the telephone, the workshop will be streamed via the Internet.
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Lynch Syndrome Hereditary Cancers Public Awareness Day

Posted by Kate Murphy on March 30th, 2011

Image of DNA and HumansToday, as we reach the end of Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, we focus on raising awareness of Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer or HNPCC).

Governors of a number of states have proclaimed March 30, 2011 as Lynch Syndrome Hereditary Cancers Public Awareness Day.

Inherited mutations in the genes that cause Lynch syndrome greatly increase the lifetime risk of colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer, and also raise the risk of a number of other cancers.

Identifying families and individuals with a Lynch syndrome mutation enables prevention or early detection of Lynch-related cancers when they can be cured.

Despite higher chances of cancer, Awareness Saves Lives!
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Why Do the New Drugs Fail in Adjuvant Chemotherapy?

Posted by Heinz-Josef Lenz, MD on March 24th, 2011

Some of the most surprising data presented at the GI Symposium in January 2011 in San Francisco was the negative result of the European trial called AVANT.

Dr. Lenz Photo

Dr. HJ Lenz

In that clinical trial patients who underwent a curative resection for colon cancer received either FOLFOX or FOLFOX with Avastin® (bevacizumab) treatment after their surgery. Chemotherapy was given over 6 months, but patients who were randomly selected for Avastin received 6 months with chemotherapy and additional  6 months alone after chemotherapy ended for a total of 12 months of Avastin. Read the rest of this entry »

Physical Activity Cuts Polyp Risk

Posted by Kate Murphy on March 22nd, 2011

SneakersThe reason that regular exercise reduces risk of getting colon cancer may be because it also reduces polyps.

An analysis of 20 studies of adenomas — precancerous polyps that raise risk for colon cancer –  found that regular physical exercise reduced polyp risk by 16 percent.  More important, exercise cut back the number of the most dangerous large and advanced polyps by almost a third.

It didn’t matter whether exercise was recreational or job-related. Jogging, biking, and swimming helped, but so did walking  on the job, lifting, and digging.

The analyzed studies focused on colon cancer, which exercise has been shown to prevent.  There hasn’t been a similar exercise reduction in rectal cancer.

Lead study author Kathleen Y. Wolin, Sc.D., assistant professor of surgery at Washington University School of Medicine said,

What’s really compelling is that we see the association between exercise and lower colon cancer risk regardless of how physical activity was measured in the studies.,That indicates that this is a robust association and gives all the more evidence that physical activity is truly protective against colon cancer.

A previous meta-analysis of 52 studies by Dr. Wolin found that exercise reduced colon cancer by about 25 percent, with similar effects in both men and women.

Several ways that exercise might affect polyps and the development of cancer include reducing inflammation, enhancing immune function, increasing vitamin D levels, and reducing insulin levels and insulin resistance.

Dr. Wolin and her team concluded,

This study confirms previous reports of a significant inverse association of physical activity and colon adenoma, and suggests that physical activity can have an important role in colon cancer prevention.

SOURCE: Wolin et al., British Journal of Cancer,Volume 104, pages 882-885, March 1, 2011.

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Registration Open for MD Anderson SCOPE Run

Posted by Kate Murphy on March 10th, 2011

SCOPE Run logoLast year over 1,500 people ran or walked to defeat colorectal cancer during the MD Anderson SCOPE Run for Colorectal Cancer in Houston.

Registration is now open again to run or walk as part of the sixth annual Sprint for Colorectal Oncology Prevention and Education (SCOPE) on March 26, 2011.

The SCOPE Run raises awareness of colorectal cancer, promotes education about the disease, and celebrates survivorship. Read the rest of this entry »

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