journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019168/ethical-challenges-in-pediatric-oncology-care-and-clinical-trials
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel J Benedetti, Jonathan M Marron
The care of pediatric cancer patients is a vast departure from cancer care of adults. While the available treatment modalities-chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery-are the same, the diseases, care-delivery, and outcomes differ greatly. And just as 'children are not just little adults,' pediatric bioethics occupies a distinct place within the broader field of bioethics. In this chapter, we will begin with an introduction to fundamental principles and frameworks for understanding ethical issues in pediatrics, highlighting the triadic nature of medical decision-making between a physician, the child-patient, and the child's parent as the surrogate decision-maker...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019167/liver-living-donation-for-cancer-patients-benefits-risks-justification
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Silvio Nadalin, Lara Genedy, Alfred Königsrainer
LDLT covers all standard indications for liver transplantation, and the results are similar or even better than for standard DDLT. Due to the donor shortage and long waiting time, LDLT has become a relevant option for patients with liver tumors, provided the expected five-year survival rate is comparable to that of patients receiving a DDLT. Nowadays, LDLT offers the possibility to extend the standard morphometric selection by considering the biological parameters. In the setting of LDLT, we are not only faced with surgical morbidity in the donor, but long-term non-medical problems like psychological complications and financial burden also have to be considered...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019166/ethical-aspects-of-regulating-oncology-products
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lorenzo Guizzaro, Spyridon Drosos, Ulrik Kihlbom, Francesco Pignatti
Medicines, including those intended for the treatment of cancer, are tightly regulated. Such regulation, historically linked to disasters due to unsafe medicines, evolved to cover all aspects of research around the quality, safety and efficacy of candidate medicines. This chapter intends to give an introduction on what regulators do and where the ethical foundations for regulating medicines might be searched. Some specific dilemmas will be explored, such as (i) whether at all, and if so subject to which conditions, research on animals is justified; (ii) what to do when potentially useful data on a medicine were collected unethically; (iii) which additional ethical challenges are posed by the fact that regulators have to make decisions on a medicine under uncertainty; and (iv) how to account for patients' preferences (and their heterogeneity) in regulatory decision-making...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019165/cancer-the-media-and-dealing-with-knowledge
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Florian Steger, Maximilian Schochow
Among the primary function of the media are conveying personal understanding and expanding the subjective knowledge of the recipient citizen. A particular challenge arising during this process is the mediation of medical knowledge. In addition to pure factual knowledge, it often involves subjective experiences, hopes and wishes. One example of this is media reports about cancer therapies. As a result of widespread media coverage since 2017, the public is under the impression that methadone is a promising treatment for cancer...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019164/harms-and-benefits-of-cancer-screening
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bernt-Peter Robra
In recommending and offering screening, health services make a health claim ('it's good for you'). This article considers ethical aspects of establishing the case for cancer screening, building a service programme, monitoring its operation, improving its quality and integrating it with medical progress. The value of (first) screening is derived as a function of key parameters: prevalence of the target lesion in the detectable pre-clinical phase, the validity of the test and the respective net utilities or values attributed to four health states-true positives, false positives, false negatives and true negatives...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019163/the-right-to-know-and-not-to-know-predictive-genetic-diagnosis-and-non-diagnosis
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gunnar Duttge
The expansion of genetic diagnostic potential in the direction of future contingencies (risks) creates temptations and compulsions for timely knowledge and responsible-sometimes radical-prevention. In the area of mamma carcinoma, the 'Angelina Jolie effect' has not only been a media topic but has had real consequences. The undisputed right to knowledge is increasingly taking on the character of a general recommendation or even norm for society as a whole, regardless of the possibly toxic consequences of discovering a predisposition...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019162/risk-adjusted-prevention-perspectives-on-the-governance-of-entitlements-to-benefits-in-the-case-of-genetic-breast-cancer-risks
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Friedhelm Meier, Anke Harney, Kerstin Rhiem, Silke Neusser, Anja Neumann, Matthias Braun, Jürgen Wasem, Stefan Huster, Peter Dabrock, Rita Katharina Schmutzler
This article is a revised version of our proposal for the establishment of the legal concept of risk-adjusted prevention in the German healthcare system to regulate access to risk-reduction measures for persons at high and moderate genetic cancer risk (Meier et al. Risikoadaptierte Prävention'. Governance Perspective für Leistungsansprüche bei genetischen (Brustkrebs-)Risiken, Springer, Wiesbaden, 2018). The German context specifics are summarized to enable the source text to be used for other country-specific healthcare systems...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019161/ethical-challenges-using-human-tumor-cell-lines-in-cancer-research
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wilhelm G Dirks
Human and animal cell cultures are indispensable model systems for the biomedical research and pharmaceutical industry and already represent one of the most important alternatives to animal experiments. The development of mammalian cell culture started in the first half of the last century when fundamental questions of genetics were unresolved and the pioneers of cell culture did not care about individual personality rights of donors of biomaterials. However, cultivation of primary and continuous cell cultures was and still is usually associated with the use of FBS, which-almost universally applicable-is questionable in terms of extraction and quality variations measurably affecting reproducibility of results...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019160/hpv-vaccination-in-bangladesh-ethical-views
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marium Salwa, Tarek Abdullah Al-Munim
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination of young adolescent girls as a part of primary prevention of cervical cancer is now a routine practice in many countries. Bangladesh, a lower-middle income country, observed a successful HPV vaccination demonstration program recently. As much as the benefits of the vaccination programs are well-recorded, the ethics of administration of it is not focused highly; rather the focus tends to be on the most efficient method to get it done. In countries like Bangladesh, vaccination-related ethical issues are often overlooked...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019159/one-in-four-dies-of-cancer-questions-about-the-epidemiology-of-malignant-tumours
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christel Weiss
Cancer is the second leading cause of death globally. Malignant tumours are responsible for about 9.6 million deaths in 2018 (Ritchie H (2019) How many people in the world die from cancer? https://ourworldindata.org/how-many-people-in-the-world-die-from-cancer ). Worldwide, about 1 in 6 deaths is due to cancer. This confronts researches with the question of their origin and doctors with treatment options. It is common sense that great efforts should be done in order to reduce the number of cancer-specific deaths...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34019158/-the-king-of-diseases-an-essay-on-the-special-attention-paid-to-cancer-patients-and-how-it-came-about
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wolfgang U Eckart
The history of cancer during the twentieth century demonstrates that various factors have contributed to the perception of cancer as the 'Emperor of All Maladies', although this has never been true from an epidemiological perspective. Depending on the geographical area, infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria or cardiovascular disease still head the list of the most common illnesses. Within the group of chronic-degenerative diseases, however, cancer has outdistanced the widespread classic infectious diseases as a result of the epidemiologic transition around 1900, at least in the more developed countries...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200371/chapter-xx-antiviral-treatment-and-cancer-control
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wei-Liang Shih, Chi-Tai Fang, Pei-Jer Chen
Hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), human papilloma virus (HPV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1), Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV) contribute to about 10-15% global burden of human cancers. Conventional chemotherapy or molecular target therapies have been used to treat virus-associated cancers. However, a more proactive approach would be the use of antiviral treatment to suppress or eliminate viral infections to prevent the occurrence of cancer in the first place...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200370/merkel-cell-polyomavirus-and-human-merkel-cell-carcinoma
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wei Liu, Jianxin You
Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) is the most recently discovered human oncogenic virus. MCPyV asymptomatically infects most of the human population. In the elderly and immunocompromised, however, it can cause a highly lethal form of human skin cancer called Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC). Distinct from the productive MCPyV infection that replicates the viral genome as episomes, MCC tumors contain replication-incompetent, integrated viral genomes. Mutant MCPyV tumor antigen genes expressed from the integrated viral genomes are essential for driving the oncogenic development of MCPyV-associated MCC...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200369/novel-functions-and-virus-host-interactions-implicated-in-pathogenesis-and-replication-of-human-herpesvirus-8
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Young Bong Choi, Emily Cousins, John Nicholas
Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) is classified as a γ2-herpesvirus and is related to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a γ1-herpesvirus. One important aspect of the γ-herpesviruses is their association with neoplasia, either naturally or in animal model systems. HHV-8 is associated with B-cell-derived primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) and multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD), endothelial-derived Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), and KSHV inflammatory cytokine syndrome (KICS). EBV is also associated with a number of B-cell malignancies, such as Burkitt's lymphoma, Hodgkin's lymphoma, and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease, in addition to epithelial nasopharyngeal and gastric carcinomas...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200368/htlv-1-replication-and-adult-t-cell-leukemia-development
#35
REVIEW
Chou-Zen Giam
Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) was discovered in 1980 as the first, and to date, the only retrovirus that causes human cancer. While HTLV-1 infection is generally asymptomatic, 3-5% of infected individuals develop a T cell neoplasm known as adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) decades after infection. Since its discovery, HTLV-1 has served as a model for understanding retroviral oncogenesis, transcriptional regulation, cellular signal transduction, and cell-associated viral infection and spread...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200367/epstein-barr-virus-associated-post-transplant-lymphoproliferative-disease
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard F Ambinder
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is associated with a variety of malignancies including post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD). These include B and T cell lymphomas, epithelial, and mesenchymal tumors. The virus is ubiquitous, transmitted in saliva, and not usually associated with the development of malignancy. PTLD is usually associated with EBV when it occurs soon after the transplant. Measurement of viral DNA in blood, especially plasma, may be useful in the diagnosis of PTLD. Treatment approaches include withdrawal of immunosuppression, monoclonal antibodies or antibody conjugates, cytotoxic chemotherapy, and a variety of virus-specific treatments such as adoptive cellular therapy with EBV-specific T cells...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200366/vaccination-strategies-for-the-control-and-treatment-of-hpv-infection-and-hpv-associated-cancer
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Farmer, Max A Cheng, Chien-Fu Hung, T-C Wu
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection, currently affecting close to 80 million Americans. Importantly, HPV infection is recognized as the etiologic factor for numerous cancers, including cervical, vulval, vaginal, penile, anal, and a subset of oropharyngeal cancers. The prevalence of HPV infection and its associated diseases are a significant problem, affecting millions of individuals worldwide. Likewise, the incidence of HPV infection poses a significant burden on individuals and the broader healthcare system...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200365/high-risk-human-papillomaviruses-and-dna-repair
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kavi Mehta, Laimonis Laimins
Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are small DNA viruses that infect basal epithelial cells and are the causative agents of cervical, anogenital, as well as oral cancers. High-risk HPVs are responsible for nearly half of all virally induced cancers. Viral replication and amplification are intimately linked to the stratified epithelium differentiation program. The E6 and E7 proteins contribute to the development of cancers in HPV positive individuals by hijacking cellular processes and causing genetic instability...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200364/prevention-of-hepatitis-c-virus-infection-and-liver-cancer
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E J Lim, J Torresi
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most prevalent cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide.
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33200363/the-oncogenic-role-of-hepatitis-c-virus
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kazuhiko Koike, Takeya Tsutsumi
Persistent infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Accumulating evidence suggests that not only inflammation and subsequent fibrosis but also HCV itself are associated with hepatocarcinogenesis. To date, studies using transgenic mouse and cell-culture models, in which HCV proteins are expressed, indicate the direct pathogenicity of HCV, including oncogenic activity. In particular, the core protein of HCV induces excessive oxidative stress by impairing the mitochondrial electron transfer system by disrupting the function of the molecular chaperone, prohibitin...
2021: Recent Results in Cancer Research
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