Lung Cancer, a Disease Differently, Depending on Age and Sex
The biology of lung cancer differs from a patient to another depending on age and sex, according to a study signed by researchers at Duke University (USA). The discovery, which is published in “JAMA”, could help explain why certain groups of patients evolve better than others even when seem to have the same disease.
“Our study supports two key discoveries. First, the biology of lung cancer in women is very different from the observed in men. Women, in general, have a disease less complex, at least in term of the numbers of molecular mechanisms involved. Also discovered that there is a subgroup of patients over which could benefit from treatments which are usually reserved for younger patients,” explains Anil Potti, coauthor of the study.
The researchers found that certain molecular mechanisms were most frequently turned in some groups in others and that certain patterns are associated with a better long-term survival in patients with lung cancer.
The rate of overall survival to five years for lung cancer is only 15 percent and remains the main cause of cancer mortality in the United States. Almost half of the new cases are diagnosed in women and approximately between 30 and 40 percent of the diagnoses corresponds to over 70 years. The majority are tumors of small cells.
The authors, led by William Mostertz, discussed relevant differences clinically in biology that underlies this type of cancer by age and sex of patients. The study was based on an analysis of July 2008 to June 2009 of 787 patients with initial phase of the disease that were divided into subgroups according to the age (more or less than 70 years) or sex.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in lung cancer | No Comments »
