Early detection is the key to beating oral cancer

5/14/2007 Westchester County, NY Linda Lombroso Lower Hudson Online (www.thejournalnews.com) It was nearly five years ago that Margaret Belair received chilling news: The sensitive spot on her tongue was far more than a pizza burn or a cold sore. It was oral cancer. Belair, who'd just given birth to a baby boy, was stunned. "It didn't look or feel hard,'' says the 41-year-old mother of two, who lives in Somers. "It was just a weird irritation of the tongue, just slightly discolored, and it felt like a big canker sore.'' Despite the shock of the diagnosis, Belair was fortunate. After an operation to cut out a portion of her tongue - and the precautionary removal of several lymph nodes in her neck - all she needed was eight weeks of speech therapy (to relearn how to pronounce certain sounds) and eight weeks of physical therapy (to build up the strength in her neck). For Brian Hill, the news was not as good. By the time his oral cancer was caught in 1997, it had metastasized to his lymph nodes. Nobody expected him to survive. Although the treatment was brutal - including radiation that destroyed his salivary glands and destroyed a portion of his neck - Hill ended up beating the odds. He has since founded the Oral Cancer Foundation, a national nonprofit research and advocacy organization, and has become an outspoken champion for early detection of the disease. One of the problems in catching oral cancer early, say experts, has [...]

2009-04-15T12:26:41-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Confirmation of Association of Oral HPV Infection and Head and Neck Cancers

5/14/2007 web-based article staff CancerConsultants.com Researchers affiliated with an international study have reported that oral infection with human papilloma virus (HPV) is associated with the development of head and neck cancers. The details of this study appeared in the May 10, 2007 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. Human papilloma viruses are probably the sole cause of cancers of the cervix and have been associated with cancers of the vulva, vagina, penis and rectum. Epidemiologic and molecular biology studies have also suggested that HPV infection may be associated with cancers of the head and neck. The relationship between HPV infection and head and neck cancer was reviewed in 1998 by researchers from the University of North Carolina (see related news). They reported that the overall frequency of HPV in benign and precancerous lesions ranged from 18.5% to 35.9%, depending upon the detection methodology. Using PCR, the overall prevalence of HPV in head and neck tumors was 34.5% (416 of 1,205 tumors). Type 16 HPV, which is associated with cervical cancer, was found in 40% of cases positive for HPV. They also reported variability in other sites including 59% positivity for oral cavity cancers, 43% for the pharynx, and 33% for the larynx. The frequency of HPV positivity in oral samples from healthy individuals ranged from 1% to 60%. Furthermore, age (<60 years) and sex (male) were associated with the presence of HPV in the tumor, whereas tobacco and alcohol use were not. In the study published in 2003, [...]

2009-04-15T12:26:10-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

What Should You Know About Your Dental Hygienist

5/11/2007 web-based article staff eMaxHealth.com A visit with your dental hygienist may result in more benefits than just cleaner teeth and healthier gums -- you might even decide to stop smoking, improve your nutrition or check to see if you might be at risk for diabetes. "Most people simply don't realize just how educated and skilled their dental hygienists are," said Susan McLearan, president of the California Dental Hygienists' Association (CDHA). "The profession has evolved to the point where we actually can save lives." In keeping with its mission to raise public awareness about dental health and to promote the value of seeing a dental hygienist, the association has issued the following list of the Top Ten Things Californians Should Know About Their Dental Hygienists. "The list is intended to show how dental hygienists play such an integral role in overall public health -- in many different ways and on many different levels." That role is reflected in the following facts about Registered Dental Hygienists (RDH): 1. Highly Educated Professionals -- The minimum level of education for licensure is equivalent to a four-year degree with two years specializing in dental hygiene. 2. Committed to Expanding Access to Care -- Specially licensed hygienists can go into underserved communities and provide dental hygiene services to some of the millions of Californians who would otherwise have no access to dental care. 3. Screen for Oral Cancer -- Dental hygienists possess the skills to be the first health professional to identify potential signs of [...]

2009-04-15T12:25:45-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

HPV Linked to Throat Cancer

5/10/2007 web-based article Salynn Boyles WebMD.com Oral Sex Is Major Risk Factor HPV, the virus that causes cervical cancer, is also linked to throat cancer, and oral sex is a major risk factor for both men and women, new research shows. Having multiple oral sex partners topped the list of practices associated with an increased risk of developing oropharyngeal cancer, according to the study published in the May 10 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. People in the study who reported having a history of six or more oral sex partners were three times as likely to develop the cancer as people who reported that they had never had oral sex. In looking at patients with tumors that were positive for a particular strain of HPV already well-linked to cervical cancer, six or more oral sex partners increased risk for throat cancer by eightfold. And those who showed evidence of a prior oral infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) were 32 times more likely to develop the cancer. Oral sex seemed to be the main mode of transmission for oral HPV, although the researchers note that transmission from mouth to mouth contact couldn't be excluded. The new study shows that oral HPV infection is linked to head and neck cancer regardless of two other known risk factors: heavy tobacco and alcohol use. But longtime HPV researcher Maura L. Gillison, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, says the findings should not be seen as cause for undue alarm. [...]

2009-04-15T12:25:13-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Treatment could ‘train’ cells to kill cancer

5/9/2007 Hong Kong staff msnbc.com Scientists in Hong Kong and Australia will soon test an experimental treatment for nose and throat cancer — which “trains” the patient’s own white blood cells to fight the disease. The trial will begin over the next three months and blood samples will be collected from 30 nasopharyngeal (nose) cancer patients in Hong Kong, said lead researcher Daniel Chua, associate professor of clinical oncology at the University of Hong Kong. These will be flown to the Queensland Institute of Medical Research, where scientists will isolate and “train” a certain class of white blood cells, or T-cells, to fight the disease. The battle-ready T-cells will then be cultured and the whole army of cells will be re-injected back into the cancer patients. Some classes of T-cells have “memory.” Once these T-cells have been exposed to certain invaders and fought them off, they should hopefully launch the same response when they are re-introduced back into the patient’s body. “(We expect) the T-cells (to) initiate a very aggressive inflammatory reaction and during the process, not only will the T-cells attack the cancer cells, but other immune cells in the body will be called in to eradicate the cancer cells,” Chua told Reuters this week. Nasopharyngeal cancer, most prevalent in south China, kills one in every three victims and is thought to be linked to diets rich in preserved foods, like salted fish. Its link to the common Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), from the herpes family of viruses, is well [...]

2009-04-15T12:24:44-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Human Papillomaviruses in Head and Neck Carcinomas

5/9/2007 web-based article Stina Syrjänen, D.D.S., Ph.D. New England Journal of Medicine Volume 356:1993-1995 Each year, almost 650,000 patients worldwide receive the diagnosis of head and neck cancer and some 350,000 die from this disease.1 Nearly 90% of these cancers are squamous-cell carcinomas. The two main causative factors in approximately 80% of oral, oropharyngeal, and laryngeal carcinomas are smoking and alcohol use. Consumption of vegetables and fruit may modulate the carcinogenic effects of tobacco and alcohol, whereas low body-mass index increases the risk of oral cancer.2 The idea that human papillomavirus (HPV) plays a role in these cancers has been under investigation for at least 20 years. It is widely accepted that HPV causes cervical cancer.3 HPV has also been associated with several other types of squamous-cell carcinoma and their precursors at different sites — skin, vulva, vagina, penis, esophagus, conjunctiva, paranasal sinuses, and bronchus — but the role of HPV in the pathogenesis of the lesions is less clear than it is in cervical cancer.4 The similarity of the morphologic features of genital and oral HPV-associated lesions was one of the early findings that raised the possibility that HPV might be involved in oral and laryngeal squamous-cell carcinomas.5,6 Until recently, however, the role of HPV in the pathogenesis of head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma has been uncertain, mainly because detection of HPV DNA has been highly variable, with rates ranging from 0 to 100%.4 New data from case–control studies suggest that HPV is an independent risk factor for oral [...]

2009-04-15T12:24:13-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Life-saving cancer drug gets go-ahead for use

5/9/2007 Edinburgh, Scotland, UK staff Scotsman.com A new drug treatment doctors say could help save the lives of head and neck cancer patients has been given the go-ahead. Taxotere, which is used to treat sufferers of the aggressive cancer, has been recommended for use by the Scottish Medicines Consortium (SMC). Trials found that patients taking the drug along with their regular treatment had a 30 per cent lower risk of mortality than those receiving the standard treatment alone. Dr Elizabeth Junor, consultant clinical oncologist at Edinburgh's Western General Hospital, said: "Compared with some other tumours, there are fewer treatment options for head and neck cancer. "This SMC recommendation will mean that more patients can now get this new treatment combination. "We hope it will result in many more lives being saved across Scotland." Around 760 people in the UK are diagnosed with head and neck cancer each year, which can affect the mouth, tongue and throat.

2009-04-15T12:22:19-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Implacable insurer only adds to ordeal

5/8/2007 Kansas City, MO Mike Hendricks KansasCity.com Fighting the disease is only half the battle, Mary Casey says. That still leaves the insurance company. At least that’s how it seems to the 57-year-old Brookside woman, a part-time admissions officer at St. Teresa’s Academy. It’s bad enough Casey had the misfortune of getting cancer. Now she finds herself on the wrong end of someone’s cost-benefit analysis. “I was stunned,” she told me. “I turned to my husband and said, ‘Now what?’ ” What floored Casey was that her oncologist prescribed one of the few drugs that work on her rare form of cancer. Yet her insurance company refuses to pay for the expensive new medicine, despite studies showing the drug’s effectiveness. “You can work all your life,” Casey says, “always pay your premiums, and then be blindsided by denial of coverage when the crisis hits.” There is no news in that. Yet if we are ever to change the system, stories such as Casey’s need telling. They remind us that all too often life or death comes down to dollars and cents. In this case, pills that cost about $3,600 for a month’s supply. Casey was diagnosed with head and neck cancer in early 2005. To excise the malignant tissue, a surgeon at the KU Cancer Center removed the roof of her mouth and replaced it with a synthetic one. He prescribed a regimen of radiation treatments but warned that the cancer was likely to return somewhere else in the body. It [...]

2009-04-15T12:21:54-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Use this man to save women

5/8/2007 Palm Beach, FL Elisa Cramer PalmBeachPost.com After a 42-year-old African-American seamstress refused to give up her bus seat in 1955 to a white man, the nation responded to racism in Montgomery, Ala., in a way it had not nine months before, when a 15-year-old girl was arrested for doing the same thing. Both women were bold. Both were courageous. Both were, as Rosa Parks described herself, "only tired ... of giving in." Neither deserved the arrest, but only one became the face of the Montgomery Bus Boycott. It was not Claudette Colvin, a pregnant, unmarried teenager. To make Florida's lawmakers care about saving women from cervical cancer, a 58-year-old married father from Tampa - not sexually active teenagers - must become the face of the virus that leads to 3,700 deaths each year. David Hastings is fighting throat cancer that researchers say was caused by the same sexually transmitted virus that causes most cervical cancers. "All of my adult life," Mr. Hastings said to members of the House Schools and Learning Council last month, "I was a nonsmoker. I was a casual drinker. I was an exercise nut, a health nut." Last spring, Mr. Hastings noticed two lumps in his neck while shaving. After five doctors and several scans, an ear, nose and throat specialist told him he had Stage 4 cancer. As Mr. Hastings pointed out, "There is no Stage 5." Mr. Hastings fainted at the doctor's recommendation: "a radical neck dissection" to his collarbone to remove 26 [...]

2009-04-15T12:21:31-07:00May, 2007|Archive|

Early detection might have saved him

5/8/2007 Miami, FL Carolynn Susman MiamiHerald.com Peter Billias says he is dying of oral cancer, the kind that eats away the insides of your mouth, and the kind that may have been preventable. Or at least treatable, giving him a chance at survival, if it had been diagnosed earlier. At 50, he recognizes the heavy smoking and drinking he has done all his life are undoubtedly responsible. So, even though his prognosis isn't good, the Lake Worth man gave up the cigarettes and booze and has been clean and sober, he says, for five of the eight months since his diagnosis. He didn't call to complain or rail about his fate. He called to get the word out about making sure that lumps and bumps that aren't right in your mouth get the proper attention. That may prevent others from facing his fate. ''If you see anything in your mouth, and it doesn't go away, something is wrong. See an ear, nose and throat doctor. Insist on getting it biopsied,'' he says. ``Or just make sure you request an oral cancer check when you see your dentist. ``It's a horrifying disease. [Treatment can mean] they cut part of your tongue out. And it's hitting more and more people that don't drink or smoke.'' According to www.oralcancerfoundation.org: ``At least 34,000 Americans will be diagnosed with oral or pharyngeal [throat] cancer this year. It will cause over 8,000 deaths, killing roughly one person per hour, 24 hours per day. Of those 34,000 [...]

2009-04-15T12:20:59-07:00May, 2007|Archive|
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