Tuesday, April 30, 2013

8IGHT WAYS to Prevent Colon Cancer

http://tinyurl.com/8WaysColon
As part of the Siteman Cancer Center's new colon cancer awareness campaign featuring St. Louis Cardinals player Matt Holliday and his mom who was recently diagnosed with the disease, we've just released the latest in the 8IGHT WAYS series:  8IGHT WAYS to Prevent Colon Cancer.

The "Cancer Doesn't Take a Holliday" campaign tells the compelling story of Kathy Holliday's diagnosis with cancer and the mother/son push to get the word out on the importance of colon cancer screening and prevention.

The new 8IGHT WAYS publication lays out the key steps for lowering the risk of the colon cancer.  It hits all the well-known behaviors - like, exercise, diet, weight, and screening - plus a few less well known - like vitamin D, calcium, and alcohol.

Colon cancer is the third most common cancer in the United States, yet it's also one of the most preventable.  Seventy-five percent of all cases could be avoided by things most people can do.  The new 8IGHT WAYS is a great guide to taking healthy steps that can lower risk.

Download 8IGHT WAYS to Prevent Colon Cancer

More about the Cancer Doesn't Take a Holliday campaign

sitemanscreening.wustl.edu

Monday, April 29, 2013

Zero Conflicts. Zero Ads: Cancer News in Context and the Your Disease Risk Tools

A disturbing - but unfortunately unsurprising - story last week in the New York Times details the Wild West approach many online organizations take with people's personal  health information. With flimsy or no consent, data brokers profile individuals based on web searches and other online activities and sell this information to groups interested in using those data.

While the practice of selling aggregate and anonymous data has been around for years, the move to selling personal details (including addresses and phone numbers) of people's lives is a newer and growing practice that has broader implications.  Privacy advocates are rightfully up in arms.  

The sharing of these personal details about health, finances, and academics can impact many parts of a person's life, from employability to health insurance coverage to access to mortgages and business loans.  That the personal details are often inaccurate makes the practice even more disturbing.  

Senator John D. Rockefeller, IV, who is spearheading efforts, along with other advocates, to combat such practices and protect key aspects of personal privacy paints a gloomy picture of where things currently stand on the issue:  “What is of you, they can have.”

Standing out against this trend, we at Cancer News in Context have always placed personal privacy as a top priority of our websites and risk assessment tools - and have been highlighted for our practices in the New York Times - A Better Health Quiz.  We never sell or share any personal data or collect ad revenue of any kind.  



Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Risk-Reducing Medications for Women at High-Risk of Breast Cancer: New Recommendations and Missed Opportunities

The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recently came out with a new draft statement on the use of medications that can reduce the risk of breast cancer in women at high-risk of the disease (draft statement). The statement recommends that women at high risk of breast cancer - and low risk for medication side effects -  be offered prescription risk-reducing medications, like tamoxifen or raloxifene. The decision on whether or not to take the medication should be made as a shared decision between a patient and her physician.

Tamoxifen and raloxifene are approved by the FDA for use in preventing breast cancer in women at high risk of the disease, which is typically defined as a 1.67 percent chance or greater of developing breast cancer over a five year period. Tamoxifen is approved for women age 35 and older, while raloxifene is approved for post-menopausal women.  Since the risk of the disease goes up with age, a 1.67 percent risk essentially translates to the 5-year risk of an average woman 60 years old or over. (To see where your risk falls, visit the National Cancer Institute Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Tool.) This means approximately 10 million women in the United States are eligible for using these medications for prevention.

Yet, their current use is astonishingly low, especially given that breast cancer is a disease so feared by many women and that the medications have been demonstrated in clinical trials of high-risk women to cut the long term risk of breast cancer by 50 percent.

A recent study by Erika Waters and colleagues found that only about 117,000 women (well under one percent) in eligible age groups were taking either tamoxifen or raloxifene - a number that has basically remained steady since the year 2000.

So what keeps more women from taking these risk-reducing medications?  Evidence shows that it's the potential risk of side effects that likely sways eligible patients away from using - and their doctors from prescribing -  tamoxifen or raloxifene. Side effects, of course, are an important consideration when deciding whether or not to take any medication, and potential harms of tamoxifen and raloxifene, while rare, can be serious - including, stroke, blood clots, and uterine cancer.  So, it's good that many women approach them with caution.

Yet, simply knowing the side effects of these drugs isn't enough to provide a full picture of their ability to help or harm women.  It's important to know the likelihood that a woman might experience side effects and to put this into context with the potential breast health benefits. It is here where it can be hard for patients - and even their doctors -  to properly balance the harms and benefits of these drugs and decide when the benefits are likely to outweigh the harms.

It certainly makes sense that no woman wants to trade one serious risk for another - lowering, say, breast cancer risk but upping stroke or endometrial cancer risk an equal amount. But, reviews of evidence show that there are some pretty clear groups of women for whom the benefits of tamoxifen or raloxifene outweigh the potential harms.

The draft Task Force recommendation states that, overall, the benefits of risk-reducing medications start to outweigh the harms when the 5-year risk of breast cancer hits 3 percent or greater.  Based on the same evidence, National Cancer Institute researchers have described in detail in women age 50 and older which groups of women are likely to benefit from risk-reducing medication based on age, race, risk level, and whether or not a woman has had her uterus removed.  In general, the younger a woman is and the higher her risk, the more likely the benefit from taking risk-reducing medications will outweigh the potential harms.

The tables below show the 5-year risk for different groups where the risk-lowering benefits of tamoxifen or raloxifene are likely to outweigh the harms. Because tamoxifen can raise the risk of uterine cancer - and raloxifene does not - raloxifene is recommended over tamoxifen in women over 50 who still have a uterus.  For women without a uterus, the potential harms and benefits of tamoxifen and raloxifene are similar.

That so many women at increased risk of breast cancer choose not to take tamoxifen and raloxifene is a health paradox. "In many stories of medical advancements, it's the risks that frequently get hidden in the news headlines, but with tamoxifen and raloxifene, it seems it's just the opposite," says Graham Colditz, MD, DrPH, a Professor of Surgery at Washington University School of Medicine and Associate Director of Prevention and Control at the Siteman Cancer Center. "The harms seem to get over-played in relation to the benefits. This leaves many women and their doctors passing up what science shows is a great chance to halve their risk of breast cancer. It's a huge opportunity missed."

References

Freedman AN, Graubard BI, Rao SR, McCaskill-Stevens W, Ballard-Barbash R, Gail MH. Estimates of the number of US women who could benefit from tamoxifen for breast cancer chemoprevention. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2003;95(7):526-32.

Freedman AN, Yu B, Gail MH, Costantino JP, Graubard BI, Vogel VG, et al. Benefit/risk assessment for breast cancer chemoprevention with raloxifene or tamoxifen for women age 50 years or older. J Clin Oncol. 2011;29(17):2327-33. PMCID: 3107748.

Waters EA, McNeel TS, Stevens WM, Freedman AN. Use of tamoxifen and raloxifene for breast cancer chemoprevention in 2010. Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2012;134(2):875-80.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

"Your Disease Risk" Website Updated to Include Chronic Bronchitis and Emphysema

Our award-winning risk assessment site - Your Disease Risk - launched this week with some key scientific and content updates.  In addition to select risk factor modifications driven by a content review by our scientific advisory panel, we added a new assessment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which estimates the risk of chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Adding the COPD assessment builds on a primary goal of the Your Disease Risk site - to highlight risk factors shared by many important chronic diseases.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Advertising promotes cessation from smoking and reduces cancer burden


The New York Times recently reported on “Gruesome advertising” (http://nyti.ms/12VLyJI) that the CDC campaign against tobacco is launching to bring more graphic advertising to media-based messaging. This set of messages will increase smoking cessation. Evidence from Australia shows a spike in calls to quit lines coinciding with eh introduction of graphic messaging. Every call to a quit line has a probably if supporting a smoker to quit these call should be celebrated.

Since 1990 the rate of lung cancer in men has decreased by one third. IN 1992 the peak Ling cancer mortality was over 90 cases per 1000,000 men. Today it is below 60 cases per 100,000. This is a huge public health success, as is the fact tat mo5er than 45 million men and women have quit smoking since the firs report form the Surgeon General linking smoking to lung cancer in 1964. This is a huge public health benefit that of course is not restricted to lung cancer but also translates to lower burden from other cancer caused by smoking, and to a substantial part of the halving of coronary heart disease that we have seen since 1980.

Below is the graphic showing the relation between advertising and calls to quit lines in Australia. The data are powerful and support longer use of the CDC messaging campaign to help smokers suit.