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Leading Cornell Researcher Finds Screening May Prevent Thousands of Lung Cancer Deaths; - New Study Targets Current and Former Smokers -.


HOFFMAN ESTATES, Ill. -- Cancer of the lung is now the leading cause of death from cancer in both men and women. Lung cancer lung cancer, cancer that originates in the tissues of the lungs. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States in both men and women. Like other cancers, lung cancer occurs after repeated insults to the genetic material of the cell.  kills more individuals than cancers of the breast, colon, and prostate combined. It is estimated that there will be over 1.5 million deaths from lung cancer worldwide next year alone, that's more than 4000 new victims daily.

"Even if you have stopped smoking in the last 20 years you're not home free," explained renowned Cornell cancer researcher Claudia Henschke, MD, Ph.D., during a recent meeting of Chicago-area oncologists, radiologists, and pathologists sponsored by the Alexian Brothers Hospital Network. Henschke presented research results from a new international study showing that early detection of the disease for the highest-risk patients (current or ex-smokers, age fifty or older) could very well mean the difference between life and death.

The study's findings included renewed hope in the possibility of early detection through the promising scientific advances of CT (Computed Tomography Computed tomography (CT scan)
X rays are aimed at slices of the body (by rotating equipment) and results are assembled with a computer to give a three-dimensional picture of a structure.
). One of the most compelling aspects of Henschke's study showed that 97 percent of tumors found through CT scans - in non-symptomatic patients - are still confined to their original site and are potentially curable cur·a·ble
adj.
Capable of being cured or healed.
 with surgery alone. CT is an imaging modality that shows over 300 cross-sectional pictures of the chest, from the tip to the base of the lungs.

Early Stage I lung cancer has a cure rate of nearly 87 percent, and in certain subgroups it is even higher. The results of the most widely used screening methods to detect lung cancer during these earliest stages, including chest x-rays and sputum sputum /spu·tum/ (spu´tum) [L.] expectoration; matter ejected from the trachea, bronchi, and lungs through the mouth.

sputum cruen´tum  bloody sputum.
 cytology cytology (sītŏl`əjē), in biology, the study of the structure of all normal and abnormal components of cells and the changes, movements, and transformations of such components. , have been disappointing. By the time a lung tumor is visible on an x-ray, it usually has spread beyond the site where it arose. Currently only 16 percent of lung cancers are found at a potentially curable stage. At the time of diagnosis, 75 percent of patients with lung cancer already have symptoms (persistent cough, chest pain or recurring pneumonia or bronchitis) related to advanced local or metastatic Metastatic
The term used to describe a secondary cancer, or one that has spread from one area of the body to another.

Mentioned in: Coagulation Disorders


metastatic

pertaining to or of the nature of a metastasis.
 disease that cannot be cured; the disease is fatal in more than 90 percent of cases overall. Such was the case with ABC ABC
 in full American Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928.
 World News Tonight anchor Peter Jennings, who died after a four-month battle with the disease. "That's why catching the disease early, when it's still treatable, is vital," stressed Henschke during her presentation.

Henschke's recommendation of who should get a CT scan depends on a person's smoking history. She encourages both current and former smokers, over the age of 50, to talk to their doctor about having a CT lung screening. Henschke also endorses the screening for those over age 40 who have been exposed to secondhand smoke sec·ond·hand smoke
n.
Cigarette, cigar, or pipe smoke that is inhaled unintentionally by nonsmokers and may be injurious to their health if inhaled regularly over a long period. Also called passive smoke.
. Dana Reeve, wife of the late Christopher Reeve, recently announced that her lung cancer diagnosis might be attributable to being exposed to secondhand smoke while working in nightclubs.

Tobacco use is still by far the most preventable cause of death from lung cancer. The health benefits of quitting smoking, at any age, are immediate and substantial. In addition to stressing the importance of smoking cessation smoking cessation Public health Temporary or permanent halting of habitual cigarette smoking; withdrawal therapies–eg, hypnosis, psychotherapy, group counseling, exposing smokers to Pts with terminal lung CA and nicotine chewing gum are often ineffective. , Henschke also reported that nearly 25 percent of those who receive a CT lung scan screening quit smoking, far above the national success rate for quitting.

The new study was done in conjunction with the International Early Lung Cancer Action Project (I-ELCAP), an international collaborative group created through the union of experts on lung cancer and related issues from leading researchers around the world. Dr. Henschke is the director of the Lung Cancer Screening Lung cancer screening is a strategy used to identify early lung cancer in people, before they develop symptoms. Screening refers to the use of medical tests to detect disease in asymptomatic people.  Program at New York Weill-Cornell Medical Center.

The Alexian Brothers Hospital Network, operators of four hospitals in suburban Chicago, offers the CT scan for lung cancer at several of its facilities. "We hope this technology will allow those diagnosed with early lung cancer to have a more positive outcome," said Dr. Edward Diamond, a pulmonologist pul·mo·nol·o·gist
n.
A physician who specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of respiratory disorders.
 with the Alexian Brothers Hospital Network in attendance at the presentation. "More importantly, this has the potential to be a major breakthrough in early lung cancer detection."
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Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Sep 23, 2005
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