Thursday, December 10, 2015

New Era of Cancer Treatment


In cancer treatment, youth and good health are not a key factor. It is proved former us president 91 years old Jimmy Carter’s. Jimmy announced he was cancer free from dangerous melanoma that had metastasized to his brain. He also added that his most recent MRI brain scan did not reveal any signs of the original cancer spots nor any new ones.
The whole us nation cheers his good news and cheers also went up in cancer labs and treatment centers around the country, as front-line doctors applauded the message his success sends to other melanoma patients, especially the elderly.
Most of the patient and doctors idea is that one’s 80 years /90 years old there's no point of giving one’s this treatment, it’s not true. The case of president Jimmy Carter’s proved that.
A patient's overall health condition is more important than their age for Melanoma treatment said melanoma oncologist.
History of the carter’s treatment
Carter's treatment began with the removal of a lesion on his liver in early August.
Tests soon discovered that the cancer was melanoma, one of the deadliest of all cancers, and shortly after came, even more, bad news cancer had spread to his brain.
Carter and his doctors opted to use the current gold standard of treatment, radiation, on the four small tumors in his brain, but they also decided to add a new immunotherapy drug, pembrolizumab, just approved by the FDA last year.
"I think there's a huge effect of President Carter on cancer patients and cancer survivors because there were several things he demonstrated that are wonderful role models," said Dr. Leonard Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society.
"Here's a man who's in his 90s being active in his treatment. He demonstrated he was fully engaged and informed on the discussion about his care -- he helped make the decisions."
The use of pembrolizumab was considered off-label in Carter's case because the FDA only approved it for patients who had already tried other therapies and failed them. But studies in mice and anecdotal reports from cancer centers around the country were showing amazing success in patients of all ages to the newer immunotherapy drugs, with fewer side effects, especially when combined with radiation.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network, which sets guidelines for cancer treatment, has recently recommended some of the drugs, such as pembrolizumab, be used as first-line treatments for advanced melanoma, just as it was for Carter.
Carter's cancer legacy
Experts say Carter's legacy goes beyond his active participation in his care. His fighting spirit and positive attitude are winning combinations they hope more patients will emulate.
Hope is an important aspect of surviving cancer. Whether that's faith, religion, mindfulness, any one of many different ways that one can get into that state of mind, it's important to do so.
It's so important not to give up. The tendency of older patients with cancer, along with their loved ones, and even the doctors taking care of them, is to just accept fate and move on. They grew up in a time when 'fighting' cancer was painful, debilitating and often not successful.
Johnson said these treatments are very different than traditional chemotherapy. They work in a very different way, they activate the immune system instead of directly targeting the cancer cells and they are in most cases very well tolerated. Even patients of relatively advanced age like President Carter often can tolerate them without too many side effects.
Another benefit of Carter's success: putting the spotlight on a deadly disease and a relatively new way of treating it.
It will certainly raise understanding of melanoma cancer. It's probably the most deadly form of skin cancer and accounts for about 9, 000 deaths every year. And it certainly raises understanding of these new immune treatments, and may increase philanthropy as well as jump-start research, especially since they're beginning to work in several more tumor types than simply melanoma, such as nonsmall cellular lung cancer and kidney most cancers.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Olive Oil is Necessary for Good Health.

Olive Oil
The health benefits of olive oil are unrivaled, and research reveals more benefits nearly every day. In fact, we are only just beginning to understand the countless ways olive oil can improve our health and our lives. Olive oil is the cornerstone of the Mediterranean diet — an essential nutritional mainstay for the world’s longest-living cultures.