Monday, April 2, 2012

Early Study Hints That Breast Cancer Vaccine Might Work

HealthDay – 1 hr 44 mins ago MONDAY, April 2 (HealthDay News) -- A vaccine to prevent breast cancer's return in women with a history of the disease has triggered the desired immune response in early research.

The vaccine under development is aimed at preventing recurrence in women who have a form of tumor known as HER2-positive, according to researcher Dr. Diane Hale, a research resident in general surgery at Brooke Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston, in San Antonio.

She is set to present results of the study on Monday at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in Chicago.

The vaccine, known as the "HER2-based peptide vaccine AE37," is designed to harness the power of the patient's immune system, based on its reaction to a cancer-linked peptide (protein).

"The theory is that once you form that

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Certain Children With Autism Show More Improvement Than Others

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Measles Vaccines Won't Raise Seizure Risk in Young Kids: Study

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Smelly Urine a Red Flag for Kids' UTI

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Health Tip: Caring for Stitches

HealthDay – 1 hr 44 mins ago (HealthDay News) -- You may need stitches to help close an open wound and help reduce scarring.

The American Academy of Family Physicians offers these suggestions to care for stitches:

Wait one to three days before getting the area wet.Gently wash off any crust that forms and accumulating dirt.If the wound seeps clear yellow fluid, you may need to apply a bandage.Apply antibiotic ointment if your doctor recommends doing so.If your doctor approves, wash and rebandage the area after 24 hours.Keep the area raised above your heart to help reduce pain and swelling.

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CDC: Americans' Levels of Vitamins, Nutrients Basically OK

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Health Highlights: April 2, 2012

HealthDay – 1 hr 44 mins ago Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Ad Campaign Spurs Large Rise in Calls to Quit Smoking Line

A new U.S. government anti-smoking campaign featuring graphic images of diseased smokers led to a huge increase in the number of people calling a toll-free number to help them quite smoking.

The 1-800-QUIT-NOW line received more than 33,000 calls last week, which was the first week of the $54-million, 12-week ad campaign. The phone line received less than 14,500 calls the previous week, the Associated Press reported.

The volume of calls last week was the highest in the seven-year history of the federally-sponsored quit line, which provides counseling and information about how to quit smoking.

Officials also said the number of clicks to the federal government's Smokefree.gov website increased from about 20,000 to about 60,000 last week, the AP reported.

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FDA Refuses to Ban BPA From All Food Containers

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Friday that it will not ban the plastic-hardening chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) from all food and drink packaging, including plastic bottles and canned food.

In its response to a petition from the Natural Resources Defense Council, the FDA said the environmental group did not present compelling scientific evidence to justify new restrictions on BPA, the Associated Press reported.

BPA is found in a wide range of products ranging from dental sealants to CDs to canned food. About 90 percent of Americans have traces of BPA in their bodies, mainly due to exposure to the chemical in food containers.

Evidence from studies in animals suggests that BPA can harm the reproductive and nervous systems, potentially leading to cancer and other diseases, according to some scientists, the AP reported.

"While evidence from some studies have raised questions as to whether BPA may be associated with a variety of health effects, there remain serious questions about these studies, particularly as they relate to humans," the FDA said in its response to the petition.

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Salmonella Outbreak Caused by Pet Turtles: CDC

Sixty-six people in 16 states have become ill after being infected with salmonella from small pet turtles, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

Eleven people have been hospitalized, but no deaths have been reported. Fifty-five percent of the ill people are children age 10 or younger.

The number of reported illnesses in each state are: Arizona (2), California (8), Georgia (1), Indiana (1), Kentucky (1), Massachusetts (3), Maryland (6), Michigan (1), North Carolina (1), New Jersey (6), New Mexico (3), New York (21), Pennsylvania (7), Texas (3), Virginia (1), and Vermont (1).

An investigation revealed that the outbreak was caused by exposure to turtles or their environments, such as water from a turtle habitat.

Turtles with a shell length of less than 4 inches should not be bought or given as gifts, the CDC said.

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Immune-Based Drug Combo Might Extend Cancer Survival

HealthDay – 1 hr 44 mins ago MONDAY, April 2 (HealthDay News) -- Cancer patients who receive a combination of low-dose interleukin-2 and retinoic acid after conventional therapy seem to live longer than those who don't get the combination.

These new study findings, slated for presentation this week at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in Chicago, were seen across individuals with many different forms of advanced malignancies, including breast, lung and colon cancers.

Retinoic acid is derived from vitamin A. Interleukin-2, a compound that fortifies the immune system, is approved at high doses to treat "metastatic" melanoma and kidney cancer. Metastatic means that a cancer has spread.

The study showed that "these biological compounds may work at low doses. Bigger doses are not always better," said lead author Dr. Francesco Recchia, director of the oncology department at Civilian Hospital in Avezzano, Italy.

Recchia stumbled upon the possibility of using low-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) when he switched a patient with metastatic melanoma who didn't tolerate high doses to a lower dose, and the patient had an extended response to the therapy.

This study involved 500 patients who had already responded well to chemotherapy. They had a variety of cancers, including ovarian, lung, colon, stomach, kidney, melanoma, breast and pancreatic.

Participants gave themselves the interleukin-retinoic acid duo five days a week for three weeks, then took a break of one week followed by another three weeks -- for five years or until the cancer came back.

Individuals who pursued the maintenance therapy did live longer, the researchers found. About 43 percent of breast cancer patients were alive after five years, versus an expected average survival of about only one-quarter of patients.

Similarly, about 26 percent of lung cancer patients were alive after five years versus about 4 percent expected, nearly 44 percent of those with colorectal cancer were alive as compared with about 12 percent in an average population, and 23 percent of kidney cancer patients were alive versus 11 percent expected.

After 15 years, about 33 percent of patients were alive without having had a recurrence and 37 percent overall were alive, the investigators reported.

"This regimen works by increasing immune response," Recchia explained.

In this case, immune response consisted of an increase in the number of natural killer cells, which are primed to attack tumors, and a decrease in vascular endothelial growth factor, which would normally prompt a tumor to spread.

There were no serious side effects, Recchia said, and the therapy's cost is about $300 a week.

While IL-2 activates the immune system, retinoic acid is an angiogenic agent, meaning it reduces blood supply to tumors, explained Dr. Michael Atkins, deputy director of the Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center in Washington, D.C. He was not involved with the study.

The results are "provocative," Atkins said, but one problem is that all the patients had already benefited from chemotherapy so it's unclear if they would have done well without the immune therapy, he added.

A bigger trial of patients randomly assigned to receive treatment is now starting in Siena, Italy, in breast cancer patients, Recchia said.

Because this study was presented at a medical meeting, the data and conclusions should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

For more on interleukin-2 and other biological therapies, visit the U.S. National Cancer Institute.



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Osteoporosis Drugs May Lead to Eye Trouble: Study

HealthDay – 1 hr 44 mins ago MONDAY, April 2 (HealthDay News) -- First-time users of osteoporosis drugs called oral bisphosphonates may be at increased risk for serious inflammatory eye disease, a new study contends.

Oral bisphosphonates, such as Fosamax and Actonel, are the most commonly prescribed class of drugs to prevent or slow osteoporosis, a disease that causes very weak bones. Previous studies have linked the drugs to problems such as unusual fractures, irregular heartbeat and esophageal and colon cancer.

In addition, some case reports have shown an association between the drugs and inflammatory eye diseases -- anterior uveitis and scleritis -- that can cause serious vision impairment.

In this new study, Canadian researchers compared nearly 11,000 first-time users of oral bisphosphonates and more than 920,000 non-users. First-time users had incidence rates of 29 per 10,000 person-years for uveitis and 63 per 10,000 person-years for scleritis, compared with 20 per 10,000 and 36 per 10,000, respectively, for non-users. Per-person years are determined by multiplying the number of participants by the number of years the drugs are taken.

The study is published April 2 in the journal CMAJ.

"We found that first-time users of bisphosphonates are at an increased risk of scleritis and uveitis," wrote Dr. Mahyar Etminan, of the Child and Family Research Institute and the Department of Medicine at the University of British Columbia, and colleagues in a journal news release.

"Our study highlights the need for clinicians to inform their patients about the signs and symptoms of scleritis and uveitis, so that prompt treatment may be sought and further complications averted," they added.

More information

The National Osteoporosis Foundation has more about osteoporosis medications.



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Should Elderly Drivers Need a Doctor's Note?

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Many older baby boomers will turn 65 this year — the largest generation of senior citizens ever to own driver’s licenses.

The influx of senior drivers may make it the right time to start implementing physician-mandated screenings to check whether some are medically fit to take the wheel, say some physicians.

“The restriction of licenses throughout Canada generally occurs only after accumulation of moving violations,” Dr. Donald Redelmeier, a professor of medicine at the University of Toronto, wrote in an editorial published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

“This approach is often too late to prevent injuries,” Redelmeier wrote.

Sixty-nine percent of Americans ages 55 and older use more than one medication that can affect their driving, according to a 2009 study by the AAA Foundation.

Graduated licensing programs that have restricted night and highway driving for young adults seem to have reduced the accident rate in both Canada and the U.S.  Redelmeier proposed similar programs for the elderly.

“The principle is to prevent trauma rather than to await a series of incidents before taking any action,” Redelmeier wrote.

But some researchers say physicians are overestimating how dangerous elderly drivers really are.

While it’s true that the older you get, the more likely you are to get in a crash, current data shows teenage drivers are far more likely to get into a crash than the elderly, according to Ezra Hauer, a professor in the department of civil engineering at the University of Toronto.

“In spite of what data show consistently, almost one-third of Canadians believe that elderly drivers are a ‘very or extremely serious traffic safety problem,’” Hauer wrote in a commentary published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

That perception may also apply to physicians who could be tasked to screen the elderly, he said.

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Should Elderly Drivers Need a Doctor's Note?

Print

Many older baby boomers will turn 65 this year — the largest generation of senior citizens ever to own driver’s licenses.

The influx of senior drivers may make it the right time to start implementing physician-mandated screenings to check whether some are medically fit to take the wheel, say some physicians.

“The restriction of licenses throughout Canada generally occurs only after accumulation of moving violations,” Dr. Donald Redelmeier, a professor of medicine at the University of Toronto, wrote in an editorial published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

“This approach is often too late to prevent injuries,” Redelmeier wrote.

Sixty-nine percent of Americans ages 55 and older use more than one medication that can affect their driving, according to a 2009 study by the AAA Foundation.

Graduated licensing programs that have restricted night and highway driving for young adults seem to have reduced the accident rate in both Canada and the U.S.  Redelmeier proposed similar programs for the elderly.

“The principle is to prevent trauma rather than to await a series of incidents before taking any action,” Redelmeier wrote.

But some researchers say physicians are overestimating how dangerous elderly drivers really are.

While it’s true that the older you get, the more likely you are to get in a crash, current data shows teenage drivers are far more likely to get into a crash than the elderly, according to Ezra Hauer, a professor in the department of civil engineering at the University of Toronto.

“In spite of what data show consistently, almost one-third of Canadians believe that elderly drivers are a ‘very or extremely serious traffic safety problem,’” Hauer wrote in a commentary published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

That perception may also apply to physicians who could be tasked to screen the elderly, he said.

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Photos: How Face Transplant Changed Dallas Wiens' Life

WARNING: Some of the following pictures are of a graphic nature. Viewer discretion is advised. (ABC News) Like It. Tweet It. Digg It. ABC News on FacebookSlideshows

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