Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Drugs make headway against lung, breast, prostate cancers

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Jun, 2019 09:36 PM

    Newer drugs are substantially improving the chances of survival for some people with hard-to-treat forms of lung, breast and prostate cancer, doctors reported at the world's largest cancer conference.

    Among those who have benefited is Roszell Mack Jr., who at age 87 is still able to work at a Lexington, Kentucky, horse farm, nine years after being diagnosed with lung cancer that had spread to his bones and lymph nodes.

    "I go in every day, I'm the first one there," said Mack, who helped test Merck's Keytruda, a therapy that helps the immune system identify and fight cancer. "I'm feeling well and I have a good quality of life."

    The downside: Many of these drugs cost $100,000 or more a year, although what patients pay out of pocket varies depending on insurance, income and other criteria.

    The results were featured Saturday and Sunday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology conference in Chicago and some were published by the New England Journal of Medicine. Companies that make the drugs sponsored the studies, and some study leaders have financial ties.

     

    MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

    Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

    Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay
    Regular, moderate consumption of filtered, decaffeinated coffee may decrease an individual's risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, promising research indicates....

    Filtered coffee keeps diabetes at bay

    Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime

    Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime
    A Croatian biologist has developed an app for smartphones that is able to follow up on the user's physical fitness by taking "selfie" photos on a daily basis....

    Selfie-photo app to follow up fitness regime

    'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid

    'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid
    They may improve the creativity of only those who are not naturally gifted, the findings suggested. The study focused on the smart drug Modafinil....

    'Smart' drugs make bright people stupid

    'Excessive guilt in young children leads to depression'

    'Excessive guilt in young children leads to depression'
    "I think the story is beginning to emerge that depression may predict changes in the brain, and these brain changes predict risk for recurrence," Belden added....

    'Excessive guilt in young children leads to depression'

    How to make your kids consume veggies the French style

    How to make your kids consume veggies the French style
    French mothers often add vegetable cooking water to their infants' milk to help introduce them to eating vegetables at the weaning stage and...

    How to make your kids consume veggies the French style

    Over 50 percent diabetics may develop heart diseases: Study

    Over 50 percent diabetics may develop heart diseases: Study
    Over 50 percent of diabetes patients in India are at the risk of developing heart diseases, while 63 percent are at risk of getting microvascular complications, a study revealed Wednesday....

    Over 50 percent diabetics may develop heart diseases: Study