Older prostate cancer patients might be overtreated

WEDNESDAY, Feb. 29 (HealthDay News) — Seniors may not benefit from prostate cancer treatment, according to a new study that found aggressive therapy has become more common among men with short life expectancies and less aggressive forms of the disease.

“Treatment can do more harm than good in some instances,” senior study author Dr. Cary Gross, an associate professor of internal medicine at the Yale School of Medicine, said in a university news release. “Among men who are older and have less aggressive forms of prostate cancer, their cancer is unlikely to progress or cause them harm in their remaining years.”

The researchers used Medicare records to examine information on more than 39,000 men with prostate cancer aged 67 and older. The study, published Feb. 27 in Archives of Internal Medicine, found increasingly intensive treatment among older patients puts them at risk for complications and reduced quality of life. And it needlessly drives up health care costs, the study authors noted.

The percentage of men who received treatment for prostate cancer rose from slightly over 61 percent to nearly 68 percent from 1998 through 2007, the investigators found.

“However, we were surprised to find that the biggest increase was among men with moderate-risk prostate cancer who had the shortest life expectancy,” said Gross, who is a member of Yale Cancer Center. “On the other hand, cancer treatment decreased among men with low-risk tumors and longer life expectancy.”

Cancer treatment should be tailored to meet the needs of individual patients, the researchers concluded. “Future work should explore how better to incorporate both cancer characteristics and patient life expectancy into decision making,” Gross said.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about prostate cancer treatment.

Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

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Cancer Treatment Centers of America Selects Unibased Systems Architecture to Provide Enterprise Scheduling Solution

CHESTERFIELD, Mo.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Unibased Systems Architecture, Inc. (Unibased) announced today that the
nationally renown Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA) has signed
an agreement to deploy its award-winning ForSite2020® application suite
across all CTCA facilities nationally. Unibased’s ForSite2020® solution
includes enterprise scheduling, a consumer portal for patient self
scheduling, a physician portal for physician office scheduling and order
tracking, and a fax management solution for managing faxed physician
orders. After an extensive evaluation process, CTCA selected Unibased as
the best solution available to facilitate enterprise scheduling, access
management and resource utilization across a major state-of-the-art
national cancer treatment network.

CTCA was seeking a solution provider with a history of delivering
innovative new design to serve the unique needs of their clients. One of
the features anticipated is to provide CTCA-affiliated healthcare
providers with integration between their Microsoft® Outlook calendars
and their hospital schedule. This integration will provide two-way
communication between Microsoft® Outlook and Unibased’s ForSite2020®
enterprise scheduling to expedite resource management, enhance physician
relations and improve efficiency for streamlined coordination of care.

Chris Cashell, Assistant Vice President of Enterprise Technology
Services for CTCA, stated, “One of the primary reasons Unibased was
selected is their reputation for working with their clients toward
development of new ways to improve access and resource utilization.
After conducting a comprehensive vendor evaluation and due diligence
process, the CTCA selection committee concluded that Unibased offers a
superior solution that is uniquely positioned to deliver the scheduling
capabilities and integration required by an organization specializing in
caring for cancer patients.”

Bob Grass, Unibased Principal Consultant, added, “In the initial
discussions with CTCA, it became clear that Unibased was the missing
piece of the puzzle for them, combining the current Unibased
ForSite2020® product set with the development of additional unique
solutions for the special market served by CTCA. We are delighted to
assist CTCA in their very special mission and will be proud to share in
their success. CTCA’s newest facility in the Atlanta area will open in
the early summer of 2012 with ForSite2020® in full operation.”

About Cancer Treatment Centers of America: Cancer Treatment
Centers of America (CTCA) is a national network of hospitals providing a
comprehensive, fully integrated approach to cancer treatment. CTCA
serves patients with complex cancer from all 50 states at facilities
located in suburban Chicago, Philadelphia, Tulsa and suburban Phoenix.
Known for delivering the Mother Standard® of care and Patient
Empowerment Medicine®, CTCA provides patients with information about
cancer and their treatment options so they can control their treatment
decisions. For more information about CTCA, go to www.cancercenter.com.

About Unibased Systems Architecture, Inc.: Celebrating its 25th
year in the healthcare information technology (HIT) industry, Unibased
has achieved “Best In KLAS”1 for 9 consecutive years for the
market segment of enterprise scheduling (2003-2011) and 8 consecutive
years for surgery management (2003-2010), as well as the KLAS Category
Leader Award (1999-2002). Unibased, an Amerinet supplier, markets
various products that are open, scalable, integrated client/server and
web-based solutions, designed to meet the unique needs of healthcare
organizations and improve the coordination of healthcare services.
Unibased ForSite2020® v7.0 received inpatient and outpatient modular EHR
ONC-ATCB certification on 11/17/2011. ForSite2020® v7.0 is an integrated
solution that provides improved access management processes including
physician and consumer portals, physician order tracking, EMPI,
registration, scheduling, conflict resolution, and tracking patient
resource needs from pre-access through follow-up. ForSite2020® v7.0
monitors the effectiveness of clinical programs, financial productivity
and capacity management to improve quality, safety, and efficiency
related to the coordination of care.

ForSite2020® v7.0 also includes a surgery management module that
coordinates surgery procedures and surgeon preferences, pre-admission
activity monitoring, tissue tracking, suite utilization, materials
management, clinical worker training and certification, perioperative
charting, anesthesia management integration, and surgery-based EHR.
ForSite2020® v7.0 improves the communication between hospitals and
physicians through its physician portal, automated order creation, and
business intelligence analytics. ForSite2020® v7.0 impacts the revenue
cycle through functions such as validation of patient demographics,
patient’s current insurance eligibility checking, assurance of medical
necessity compliance and estimation of the patient’s out-of-pocket
expense based upon scheduled and ordered services.

Unibased solutions will increase provider sales quickly, through its
physician and consumer portals as well as its Business Process
Management (BPM) capabilities. They will reduce provider debt associated
with patient payments and minimize claim denials associated with
inaccuracies and missing documentation. Most importantly, providers
realize these benefits within months, not years. All Unibased solutions
are supported by integrated automatic data collection processes such as
bar coding, facsimile collection and retention, optical and intelligent
character recognition, and document image collection and storage – all
linked to the appropriate patient and administrative records. Unibased
Systems Architecture, Inc. is a private corporation founded in 1986, and
is based in St. Louis, Missouri. All Unibased products are made and
supported in the United States.

Website: www.unibased.com
Follow
us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/unibased
Blog:
http://unibased.blogspot.com

1 2003 – 2011 Best in KLAS Awards: Software Services,
December 2011. © 2011 KLAS Enterprises, LLC. All rights reserved. www.KLASresearch.com

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Kleybanova returning after cancer treatment

LONDON — Former top-20 player Alisa Kleybanova says she has completed her treatment for cancer and will play at the Sony Ericsson Open next month.

The 22-year-old Russian announced in July that she had Hodgkin’s lymphoma and would undergo treatment in Italy, where she has a training base.

She said in a posting Wednesday on the WTA website that the “treatments were successful, my doctors are happy with my health and I’m feeling great!”

Kleybanova is training in Florida and says she has been given a wild-card entry into the Sony Ericsson Open, which begins March 20. She has won two singles titles.

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press

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Canadian First: Early-Stage Lung Cancer Gets New Surgical Treatment with Robot

Newswise — In a Canadian first, thoracic surgeons at Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network used a robotic surgical system to treat early-stage lung cancer by removing the cancer, along with a lobe of the lung. The use of this system improves outcomes after surgery and will expand the numbers of patients who can benefit from this type of minimally invasive surgical treatment.

In their pioneering work, a team of surgeons led by Dr. Kazuhiro Yasufuku, Director of the Interventional Thoracic Surgical Program at Toronto General Hospital (TGH), and Dr. Tom Waddell, thoracic surgeon and Head of the Division of Thoracic Surgery, performed a robotic surgery on a 78-year-old man with a tumour the size of a penny in his lung’s upper right lobe. After examining the images of the tumour, its location and assessing the potential benefit to the patient, the team decided that the best option for the patient was to use the da Vinci Surgical System to remove the cancerous portion of the lung. The surgery was performed at TGH, as part of the Princess Margaret Cancer Program.

“More than 70 percent of lung cancers have a good chance of being cured, if they are treated early enough, so we have brought together a team of surgeon-scientists, who use and further develop the latest technology to try and change lung cancer’s horrible statistics, “ says Dr. Yasufuku, adding that the future of treatment belongs to robotics since it can incorporate different imaging modalities which will guide surgeons to perform surgery more safely, and possibly more precisely, something that is not possible with other techniques.

Dr. Yasufuku, one of the most internationally respected thoracic surgeons with expertise in minimally invasive thoracic surgery and diagnostic procedures, was recruited from Tokyo, Japan to set up a unique Interventional Thoracic Surgical Program at TGH, which includes the development of novel technology and a surgical suite to improve the current ways of diagnosing and treating lung cancer.

Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer death for both men and women. More than
25,000 Canadians are diagnosed with lung cancer yearly, and more than 20,000 will die of it.

On average, 69 Canadians will be diagnosed with cancer every day, and on average, 56
Canadians will die of lung cancer every day. One in 11 men is expected to develop lung cancer during his lifetime, and one in 13 will die of it. One in 15 women is expected to develop lung cancer during her lifetime, and one in 17 is expected to die of it.

The day after his robotic surgery on October 20, 2011, Stanley Skorpid, 78, was able to get out of bed, and eat cornflakes for breakfast. On the third day, Stanley was impatiently walking the hospital hallways, and on the fifth day, he was glad to be going home. He is now back at work as a concierge, and continues to walk his German shepherd dog, Skor, about one mile to the lake close to his home.

On his second post-operative check-up today, Stanley remains cancer-free. “I’m still here,” he says happily, “I’m feeling good.”

Many centres would not consider surgery for someone of Stanley’s age, points out Dr. Yasufuku, noting that the use of the robotic system contributed to Stanley’s early recovery, along with minimal complications and pain, and a better quality of life.

Surgeons at TGH have since performed six more successful surgeries with the robotic technique on patients with lung cancer. The patients typically have shorter hospital stays, less pain, easier recoveries, less blood loss and scarring than as if they had been operated on with open-incision surgery.

During Stanley’s surgery, the surgeons made four tiny incisions in his chest between the ribs to insert a small scope and thin robotic-assisted surgical instruments. The scope provides a three-dimensional view of the chest and lungs on high-definition monitors – a magnification 10 times greater than normal vision – while the surgical tools are used to remove the cancer. The surgeon’s hands control the four robotic arms from a nearby console, and the robotic arms, in turn, translate the surgeon’s hand movements into smaller, flexible, and more precise movements of tiny instruments inside the body in real time. This precision and flexibility is especially useful in dissecting and then removing tumours as well as clearing the small bean-shaped lymph nodes located along the system of lymphatic vessels, around large blood vessels, in minimizing damage to the chest wall and surrounding tissues, and in meticulously being able to remove the smallest possible portion of the cancerous lung.

Traditionally, lung cancer resections have been done via an open incision or thoracotomy. This means that the ribs are spread apart to provide access to the chest, and this spreading of ribs and cutting of the muscle is linked to discomfort after surgery. Moreover, patients are left with a long incision on the side of the chest and a long recovery after the operation. Sometimes, minimally invasive thoracoscopic techniques are used instead, but they are limited by a standard video monitor and rigid instruments.

“We anticipate that robotic technology will provide a further improvement over videothoracoscopic minimally invasive techniques that is our current standard at UHN for early stage lung cancers,” notes Dr. Yasufuku.

The da Vinci System enhances the surgeon’s technique and capability in performing complex minimally invasive surgery, such as in fine-tissue dissection and suturing. Named after Leonardo da Vinci who invented the first robot, and used anatomical accuracy and three-dimensional details to give life to his masterpieces, the system provides surgeons with similarly enhanced details.

“The robot becomes your hands, it augments what your hands can do,” explains Dr. Yasufuku. “It’s so easy for your hands to move much more finely right inside the patient. They can get in really deep.”

To date, robotic surgery has most often been used for prostate and gynecological surgeries. It is now being used in several U.S. and European centres, and at TGH, as a useful technique in treating lung cancer. Studies in the 2011 Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery have shown that it is a safe procedure, and results in lower morbidity, such as blood loss, risk of infection, lower mortality, shorter hospital stays, and better quality of life than rib-and nerve-sparing thoracotomy.

In 2008, the Muzzo Family Charitable Foundation made a very generous pledge gift of $5,000,000 through the Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation to purchase the Da Vinci robot and to provide related program funding. This gift enabled the robotics program to begin and the Foundation and UHN are very grateful to the Muzzo family for their ongoing support and keen interest in the program’s development.

“We are proud to be able to contribute to such a leading edge technology with the potential to directly impact a patient’s recovery in a very difficult time,” said Marc Muzzo.

For doctors wishing to refer patients for robotic surgery consideration, please contact the University Health Network Lung Cancer Rapid Assessment and Management Program (LungRAMP):Hotline: 1- 877-Lung911 (877- 586-4911) or Fax: 416 340-3353 or Email: lung911@uhn.ca.

About Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network
Toronto General Hospital is a partner in the University Health Network, along with the Toronto Western Hospital, the Princess Margaret Hospital and the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute. These research hospitals are affiliated with the University of Toronto. Toronto General Hospital is a national and international source for research, education and patient care, and is recognized internationally for its innovations in transplantation, surgical innovation, infectious diseases, diabetes and genomic medicine.

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Older Prostate Cancer Patients Might Be Overtreated: Study

Older women who eat high amounts of the kind of fat found in fried foods and baked goods face a greater risk of stroke than women who eat lower fat diets, a US study suggested.

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Centre opens for cancer patients

Part of teenage cancer unit at Addenbrooke's Hospital in CambridgeThe unit is designed to be a home from home for patients and their families

The first two patients have moved into a teenage cancer unit at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge.

The 11-bed ward cost £2.9m and is expected to become the principal cancer treatment centre in East Anglia for people aged 14 to 24.

Designed to “allow teenagers to be teenagers”, it includes social and educational zones and parents’ areas.

It was funded by the Teenage Cancer Trust with contributions from Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Trust.

The facility is the 22nd to be opened by the Teenage Cancer Trust, but the only one of its kind in East Anglia.

It will be staffed by a dedicated team of nurses, healthcare assistants, a ward clerk and three doctors.

Dr Helen Hatcher, consultant oncologist at Cambridge University Hospitals, said: “Evidence shows that a dedicated unit staffed by specialist consultants and nurses results in better survival rates and faster recovery.”

She said past and present patients had played a significant role in designing the “home from home” facility.

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