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Cancerworld Magazine > Articles

Articles

189 posts
Decolonising cancer research: why it matters, what can be done
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Decolonising cancer research: why it matters, what can be done

  • Swagata Yadavar
  • 16 July 2021

When cancer epidemiologist and medical doctor Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy returned to Malaysia in 2011 after completing her PhD in cancer epidemiology in the Netherlands, she hadn’t expected the move to negatively affect her research prospects. As it turns out, she was…

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Tailored exercise: a key element in personalised treatments and prevention
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Tailored exercise: a key element in personalised treatments and prevention

  • Adriana Albini
  • 14 July 2021

The expression ‘couch potato’ conjures up images of a worldly-wise, self-mocking type who leaves the rat-race to others, while happily cuddling up in front of the TV with snacks and drinks. Yet the consequences of such a lifestyle are dire.…

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Lung cancer screening: time to act on the evidence
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Lung cancer screening: time to act on the evidence

  • Janet Fricker
  • 2 July 2021

“It’s extraordinary that screening for the biggest cancer killer is not available in most of Europe," says Anne Marie Baird, President of Lung Cancer Europe (LuCE). “Lung cancer causes more deaths in Europe than breast, colorectal and cervical cancers combined,…

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Innovations in supportive care: cancer treatment side effects
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Innovations in supportive care: cancer treatment side effects

  • Rachel Brazil
  • 18 June 2021

The association between cancer treatments and dramatic side effects such as uncontrolled nausea and vomiting retains a powerful hold over public perceptions and parts of the media. Recent decades have seen a big improvement in many of these, partly due…

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Trust me: I’m a surgical oncologist!
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Trust me: I’m a surgical oncologist!

  • Marc Beishon
  • 4 June 2021

Surgery has been the mainstay for treating solid tumours since the dawn of cancer treatment, and recent decades have seen a huge increase in the complexity and multidisciplinary demands of carrying out cancer operations. So it can come as a…

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Pain relief is a right: building confidence in opioid use in oncology
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Pain relief is a right: building confidence in opioid use in oncology

  • Sophie Fessl
  • 20 May 2021

Opioid analgesics are essential for pain relief and pain treatment in patients with active malignant disease. Yet, in 2011, the World Health Organization estimated that, worldwide, 5.5 million people living with terminal cancer suffered from moderate to severe pain, because…

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Prostate cancer: new leads for deterring progression
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Prostate cancer: new leads for deterring progression

  • Janet Fricker
  • 23 April 2021

Future prospects for tackling aggressive prostate cancer emerged from two presentations at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual meeting, held virtually in mid-April. One identified how the risk of prostate cancer progressing to lethal disease might be mitigated by…

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PSA population screening is back in favour: here’s why
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PSA population screening is back in favour: here’s why

  • Simon Crompton
  • 23 April 2021

Five years ago, the idea of national screening programmes for prostate cancer had gone cold. The benefits of PSA (prostate specific antigen) blood testing, introduced as a screening tool in the 1980s, had long been fiercely debated. But by 2015…

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Older, frail patients are still being let down by the regulators
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Older, frail patients are still being let down by the regulators

  • Sophie Fessl
  • 8 April 2021

Hans Wildiers is frustrated. “This drug is well-tolerated in older persons – this is a very frequent conclusion in publications. And it is often not a correct conclusion,” says the immediate past president of SIOG, the International Society of Geriatric…

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Not too little, not too much… a lesson for cancer prevention from ancient civilisations 
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Not too little, not too much… a lesson for cancer prevention from ancient civilisations 

  • Adriana Albini
  • 31 March 2021

“If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have found the safest way to health.” This quotation from Hippocrates pops up regularly in writings advocating a…

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