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Breast Cancer Drug Shows Promise Against Serious Infections
An FDA-approved drug used for preventing recurrence of breast cancer shows promise in fighting life-threatening fungal infections common in immune-compromised patients, such as infants born prematurely and patients with cancer. Some scientists suspected that tamoxifen has antifungal properties; now new research from the University of Rochester Medical Center shows that it actually kills fungus cells and stops them from causing disease.
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Afinitor And Sandostatin LAR Phase II Data Show Advanced Pancreatic NET Patients Remain Progression-Free For Nearly 17 Months
New data demonstrate that treatment with Afinitor® (everolimus) in combination with Sandostatin® LAR® (octreotide acetate suspension for injection) and Afinitor monotherapy may have the potential to stabilise tumour growth in patients with advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (NET). These results were presented at the 11th World Congress on Gastrointestinal Cancer in Barcelona, Spain.
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First International Conference On Cancer Of Unknown Primary To Be Held London October 15
When a patient is diagnosed with metastatic disease the primary site of the cancer is usually, but not always, evident. When the origin of the cancer is not identified it is described as a Cancer of Unknown Primary site, or CUP.
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IRIN Examines Efforts To Improve Sleeping Sickness Dectection

IRIN examines the efforts of the Geneva-based Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND) to develop less costly surveillance equipment to improve the ability to detect the parasitic disease trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness) in endemic countries. Though "trypanosomiasis can be cured within a week of hospitalization," left undetected, the disease advances, making it treatable only by medication that "can be toxic in up to 10 percent of patients," according to Joseph Ndung"u, head of FIND"s trypanosomiasis program. The article details the difficult process of detecting trypanosomiasis infection and highlights FIND"s efforts to develop a field microscope capable of detecting the parasite at a fraction of the cost and a "molecular detection" system that does not require specialized labs or personnel. IRIN writes: "FIND"s Ndung"u said that while surveillance has improved and helped reduce human deaths, the disease has typically resurged after occasional dips," with "a more than 30-percent prevalence in some endemic countries" in recent years. "This sleeping sickness disease is like a sleeping giant," Ndung"u said. "It goes underreported, especially during periods of conflict, and by the time it receives national attention, a large proportion of the population is infected." According to Ndung"u, more than 90 percent of known trypanosomiasis infections are currently in the Democratic Republic of Congo (7/14). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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