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Dentist Links Fosamax-type Drugs to Jaw Necrosis

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By Thursday, January 01 2009 12:00

Researchers at the University Of Southern California, School Of Dentistry have released results of clinical data that links oral bisphosphonates to increased jaw necrosis. Their study, published today in January 1 Journal of the American Dental Association (JADA), is  among the first to acknowledge that even short-term use of common oral osteoporosis drugs such as Fosamax may leave the jaw vulnerable to devastating necrosis.

 If anything, TV commercials like the one for Boniva featuring Sally Field ("I've got this one body") have tended to glamorize  this class of drugs.

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Treatments - Radiation

Friday, January 02 2009 00:00

Seeding for Prostate Cancer Not Affected by Adverse Family History

Having a father or brother with prostate cancer has no impact on the outcomes of prostate cancer patients treated with brachytherapy (also called seed implants), according to a January 1 study in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, the official journal of the American Society for Radiation Oncology. Patients with a first-degree family history have clinical and pathologic characteristics similar to men with no family history at all.

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Why Androgen Blockade Therapy Stops Working for Prostate Cancer Patients

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Treatments

Wednesday, December 31 2008 00:05

Androgen blockade therapy for men with advanced prostate cancer often yields only a temporary fix or respite, not a permanent cure. Now, researchers at Johns Hopkins have discovered critical differences in the hormone receptors on prostate cancer cells in patients who no longer respond to this therapy. The findings, reported in the Jan. 1 issue of Cancer Research, could lead to a way to track disease progression, as well as new targets to fight prostate cancer.

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Low-Income Men More Likely to be Diagnosed with Advanced Prostate Cancers

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Income

Wednesday, December 17 2008 00:00

Low-income men are more likely to present with advanced prostate cancers, most likely because they don’t receive screening services shown to reduce the diagnosis of later-stage cancers, a UCLA study found.

The study focused on a group of disadvantaged men enrolled in the state’s IMPACT (Improving Access, Counseling and Treatment for Californians with Prostate Cancer) program, which provides high-quality care to poor, underinsured and uninsured men. Researchers found that of the 570 men studied, 19 percent had metastatic cancer at diagnosis, compared to 4 percent of men from the general population who were followed in other studies.

Read more: Low-Income Men More Likely to be Diagnosed with Advanced Prostate Cancers

 

Pre-Existing Diabetes Raises Cancer Patients' Risks

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Prostate Cancer Plus - Diabetes

By Monday, December 15 2008 18:56

Frederick Brancati MDPeople with diabetes at the time of a cancer diagnosis have an increased risk of death compared to patients without diabetes, according to a study led by Frederick Brancati, M.D., Johns Hopkins University and published in the December 17 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association today.

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