Drug-drug and disease-drug interactions in elderly patients with cancer are significant; 33% of elderly patients who are taking 3 or more medications are rehospitalized within 6 months of a hospital discharge. "A better index of predicting tolerance to chemotherapy in the elderly is crucial," said Mihaela Popa, MD, Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida. Tolerance to chemotherapy among older patients with cancer may be affected by multiple chronic conditions requiring multiple medications and aging-related alterations that induce changes in drug distribution, she said.
Read More
KRAS gene status predicts response to initial biologic treatment for colorectal cancer
June 1st 2008Patients with metastatic colorectal cancer are more likely to respond to initial treatment that includes cetuximab if they have nonmutated, wild-type KRAS gene status, reported Eric Van Cutsem, MD, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium. "For the first time in colorectal cancer, we are able to predict which patients are likely to be helped by the new biologics," he said. "KRAS is the first molecular marker for the selection of a targeted therapy in combination with a standard chemotherapy regimen in first-line metastatic colorectal cancer. KRAS testing should be routinely conducted in all colorectal cancer patients immediately after diagnosis to ensure the best treatment strategies for the individual patient."
Read More
Feds limit deceptive MA marketing tactics
June 1st 2008Washington, D.C. - The Bush administration has proposed additional curbs on certain sales practices by insurers likely to confuse and deceive seniors enrolling in Medicare Advantage and prescription drug plans. Insurers applauded the marketing policy, partly in hopes of heading off legislation that would give states a larger role in policing Medicare marketing activities.
Read More
Many still wrong in their DM savings calculations
June 1st 2008How is it that well-informed people can look at the same data and come up with dramatically different conclusions and action implications? It turns on whether the analysis is done by biostatisticians looking at utilization data in an academically rigorous way, or by actuaries and benefits consultants looking at overall financial trends in a pre-post manner.
Read More
Complex decision making requires better collaboration
June 1st 2008The use of technology to automate simple tasks has been widely adopted. E-mails broadcast information in a fraction of the time it would take a manual process. More complex tasks, however, require a human driver, and those tasks are in higher demand today.
Read More
Intensivists bring experience to critical care medicine
June 1st 2008The intensive care unit (ICU) is, in many ways, the most significant section of a hospital, because it is where life-threatening issues occur almost daily. The ICU is the one area where most hospitals don't employ specialists-board-certified intensivists with expertise and training in critical care medicine.
Read More
Where Data Stops: Employers want more data for cost planning, but where is line drawn?
June 1st 2008The U.S. healthcare system continues to struggle with costs. As costs have climbed, data needs among employers are changing swiftly. Some employers are asking their health plan providers for deeper, more telling employee health information, only to find that they aren't able to obtain it because of HIPAA and similar laws.
Read More
Package pricing: Geisinger's new model holds the promise of aligning payment with optimal care
June 1st 2008Geisinger Health System and Geisinger Health Plan have attracted attention from key industry players ever since introducing a bundled-pricing program called ProvenCare in 2006. Richard Gilfillan, MD, president and CEO of Geisinger Health Plan, played a critical role in the launch of the new payment structure.
Read More
Understand Public Information Act to protect records
June 1st 2008When companies interact with governmental bodies, issues related to the Public Information Act frequently arise. It is imperative for those companies to understand the Public Information Act as well as the internal procedures that may be developed to handle open records issues.
Read More
Adjuvant Zoledronic Acid Decreases Breast Ca Recurrence in Premenopausal Women
May 31st 2008Adding zoledronic acid to anastrozole or tamoxifen therapy decreased recurrence by 35% and increased disease free survival by 36% in premenopausal breast cancer patients, according to results of the Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group Trial 12 (ABCSG-12). The multicenter, Phase III trial is the first large trial to demonstrate the significant antitumor benefit of zoledronic acid, said Michael Gnant, MD, Medical University of Vienna. "Adjuvant treatment with zoledronic acid should be considered in order to improve the standard of care in premenopausal breast cancer patients," he said.
Read More
Vaginal Brachytherapy Is Effective, has Fewer Side Effects, Gives Better Quality of Life
May 31st 2008Vaginal brachytherapy is as effective as external beam radiation therapy in preventing the recurrence of higher-risk endometrial cancer but with fewer side effects and results in superior quality of life, according to a Phase 3 study presented by Remi A. Nout, MD.
Read More
Intervention Program Improves Sleep Quality During Chemotherapy
May 31st 2008Adherence to a four-point Individualized Sleep Promotion Plan (ISPP) intervention consisting of stimulus control, sleep restriction, relaxation therapy, and sleep-hygiene practices significantly lowered fatigue and increased sleep quality for patients undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy. Fatigue and sleep disturbances are the most frequently reported symptoms during adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer. One-third of breast cancer patients report persistent fatigue and abnormal sleep/wake cycles, said Ann M Berger, PhD, RN, professor, College of Nursing, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha.
Read More
Everolimus may Be Effective Second-line Option After Failure of First-line Tx in Renal-cell Ca
May 31st 2008Everolimus, an experimental oral agent that targets the mTOR protein, may represent an effective second-line option for patients with metastatic renal-cell carcinoma whose disease has progressed despite treatment with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Read More
Bevacizumab, docetaxel combination is effective first-line treatment for metastatic breast cancer
May 31st 2008Phase 3 trial results show that adding bevacizumab to docetaxel as first-line therapy for newly diagnosed HER2-negative, locally recurrent, or metastatic breast cancer resulted in significantly less disease progression. "This shows that the antiangiogenic approach to treating breast cancer is effective, regardless of which taxane drug it is combined with," said lead author David Miles, MD, professor, Mount Vernon Cancer Center, Middlesex, UK. Previous studies have shown that the combination of bevacizumab to paclitaxel doubled progression-free survival among patients with metastatic breast cancer.
Read More
Cancer Is Independent Predictor of Increased Vulnerability in Elderly Persons
May 31st 2008Cancer is an independent predictor of increased vulnerability, functional limitations, geriatric syndromes, frailty, and fair or poor health status among older Medicare beneficiaries. "Up until now, a lot of this has been more opinion rather than numbers," said Gary R. Morrow, MD, professor of radiation oncology, University of Rochester Cancer Center. "This gives us a method to let us know if we have changed anything.
Read More
Corporation’s age factors into health benefits
May 29th 2008National News-Small businesses are less likely to offer employee health benefits, especially if they’re the new kid on the block, according to a recent report from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Analysis finds that among firms with nine employees or fewer, those in business for 20 years or more are more likely to offer benefits.
Read More