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Friday, May 4, 2007

WHO Calls for Prevention of Cancer Through Healthy Workplaces

Source: World Health Organization

The World Health Organization is calling on governments to enact meaningful reform to workplace safety laws and to increase the measures used to protect workers from work-related injury or death. At least 200,000 people die every year from work-caused cancers and millions more are regularly exposed to carcinogenic agents that can dramatically shorten their life expectancy. Mesothelioma, lung cancer and leukemia are just three examples of work-related cancers that can be prevented with the passage and enforcement of meaningful reform.

Specific WHO recommendations include:
  • Stop the use of asbestos;
  • Introduce benzene-free organic solvents and technologies that convert the carcinogenic chromium into a non-carcinogenic form;
  • Ban tobacco use at the workplace; and
  • Provide protective clothes for people working in the sun.

The majority of workplace-related deaths currently occur in the developed world, but developing nations represent a new horizon of workplace health epidemics. The WHO's policy recommendations are made to governments in both the developed and the developing world in order to protect workers everywhere.

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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

New Methods for Treating Lung Cancer Cells that have become Resistant to New Anti-Cancer Agents

Source: News-Medical.Net

Researches from the Ireland Cancer Center have discovered a mutation in the epidermal growth factor protein (EGFR) that causes resistance in lung cancer cells to targeting agents, such as Tarceva, that attempt to halt the spread of cancer cells by disrupting the receptor responsible for tumor growth. Tarceva has been successfully deployed in clinical settings, with approximately 10 percent of patients achieving complete remission, but if the cancer returned, it was no longer successful in blocking tumor growth. The researchers discovered that a mutation altered the shape of the protein's drug-binding pocket so Tarceva no longer "fit" the pocket and, therefore, was not able to properly bind to the site to suppress tumor growth. The researches have developed compounds to avoid this resistance through an innovative use of different combinations of medicines. It is thought that the next generation of Tarceva-like drugs, some of which are already in development and starting clinical trials, will overcome these problems and prove even more effective for cancer treatment.

The research term, led by Balazs Halmos, MD, a lung cancer specialist and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, received an award for its research at the recent American Association for Cancer Research meeting.

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Monday, April 23, 2007

NYU Medical Center Partners with Rosetta Genomics to Develop a Line of Diagnostic Tools for Lung and mesothelioma Cancers

Source: Rosetta Genomics

The NYU Medical Center, one of the world's premier academic medical institutions, has partnered with Rosetta Genomics, a leader in the development of microRNA-based diagnostics and therapeutics, to jointly-develop early detection diagnostic tools for lung cancer and mesothelioma. Dr. Harvey Pass, Professor and Chief of the Division of Thoracic Surgery and Thoracic Oncology at NYU Medical Center, describes a test "... that will be able to detect cancer at an ealy stage using a simple blood draw...." The test will use a proprietary protocol developed by Rosetta Genomics to extract microRNAs, which are a recently-discovered form of RNAi that act as protein regulators and have shown promise as biomarkers for a variety of cancers.

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Legacy of Libby's Asbestos Contamination Still Being Set

Source: Billings Gazette

Libby, Montana is the location of what the EPA calls "the worst case of community-wide exposure to a toxic substance in U.S. history." One of Libby's major revenue sources was its vermiculite mine, but in 1990 it was discovered that the mine was contaminated with asbestos and that this contamination had exposed thousands of people to the many dangers of asbestos exposure, such as lung cancer and mesothelioma. There have now been over 192 deaths and 345 other cases of people made ill because of exposure to the asbestos-contaminated mine.

The primary responsibility for care and screening for these victims has been The Center for Asbestos Related Disease, a 2003 spin-off from the hospital in Libby. While the Center's main goal has been the care and screening of more than 1500 patients, the Center is also dedicated to researching new treatments and diagnostic techniques. The Center works in conjunction with other organizations, such as the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation, on a variety of research projects. One of its current projects is studying the actual asbestos-subtype found in Libby, as it differs in significant ways from the most common form of asbestos, chrysotile. Unlike chrysotile, whose fibers are serpentine-shaped and flexible, the type of asbestos found in Libby has hard, needlike fibers.

In 2001 the federal Agency for Toxic Substances Disease Registry completed a study which found that fully 19 percent of the population in and around Libby had physical signs of health-related abnormalities consistent with asbestos exposure.

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Thursday, April 19, 2007

Cancer Rates High Around Plants That Used Asbestos

Source: ScrippsNews

The Utah Department of Health has concluded that people who lived within two miles of two old vermiculite plants with heavy asbestos contamination in Salt Lake City have a fifty percent greater chance of developing lung cancer than people who live in other parts of the state. While the data didn't conclusively establish a causative relationship between the asbestos contamination and the lung cancer incidents, the high correlation rate has prompted the state to become more concerned about the potential health risks posed by these old plants. Two years ago the state, along with federal agencies, spent more than $7 million in a Superfund cleanup of the two plants.

Utah's Department of Environmental Quality, in partnership with the EPA, is now launching a search for people who have worked at the plant or lived in the surrounding neighborhoods.

The vermiculite plants received their stock from Libby, Montana, whose vermiculite mining industry was destroyed when large-scale asbestos contamination was discovered in its vermiculite ore mine in 1990. There have been more than 200 asbestos-related casualties from the mine itself, and many others have been sickened by the asbestos exposure. The EPA declared Libby, Montana to be the "worst-case of community-wide exposure to a toxic substance in U.S. History."
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libby,_Montana)

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