An anonymous reader writes
"BBC news is reporting a new handheld scanner that can detect cancers in patients. In clinical trials at a hospital in Milan, the scanner was able to correctly identify 93% of prostate cancer patients whose condition was later confirmed by a biopsy operation."
Damnit Jim (Score:4, Funny)
Damnit Jim, I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer!
Re:Damnit Jim (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Damnit Jim (Score:2)
Is is what? (Score:1, Funny)
It depends on what the meaning "is is" is.
Re:Cansa? (Score:2)
What about false positives? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What about false positives? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about false positives? (Score:3, Funny)
I could identify 100% of all cancers if you let me have unlimited false positives.
I could identify 100% of all cancers with zero false positives if you give me a stick of uranium.
Re:What about false positives? (Score:4, Insightful)
What I didn't notice is if the 34% that weren't a success were shown to have cancer and did not, or shown to not have cancer and did.
Taking a "better safe than sorry" approach, if the scanner says you're positive for cancer, then go ahead and get a biopsy even if you're actually healthy. But if the device misses the cancer, then it really can't be relied upon.
Although 94% is pretty good. I wonder what the success rate of biopsy diagnosis is...
And am I the only one who thinks it's a bit odd that they can't get their results published in a medical journal?
=Smidge=
Re:What about false positives? (Score:5, Informative)
Biopsy is nearly 100% effective; the false positive/negative risks are low in the hands & eyes of a good pathologist. The hard part is knowing what to biopsy. Some other test has to be done beforehand to show you where the putative cancer is.
Even tumors ID'd with this device would need to be confirmed via biopsy, MRI or CAT scan. Most likely MRI followed by biopsy.
As for publication, they may not have submitted it yet (need more data, timid researchers), or reviewers haven't finished their reviews yet, or the editor is sitting on it to publish it alongside another paper, or the BBC could be blowing the data out of porportion (the latter is the most likely. Happens all the time.)
Re:What about false positives? (Score:2)
The responsibility goes nowhere. People who know this stuff react with "Wow, interesting. Can I see the data?". Media types get wind of stuff, and go ask the scientists questions. They don't listen to half of it, don't understand most of the other half, and spout off "We've got the cure for cancer!!!", when all the scientist really said is that if we look at mice deficient in gene X, they are highly resistant to a few methods of giving them a specific
Re:What about false positives? (Score:2)
tumors (Score:4, Insightful)
Also it would be interesting to know if it could be adapted to detect other disorders of normal tissue via changing microwave resonance: pulmonary fibrosis, alzheimer's disease, et al.
Good ol' BBC didn't even mention the false positive rate either...
-tid242
Let's just hope the device isn't *causing* cancer (Score:2, Interesting)
I thought microwaves were bad for you.
Re:Let's just hope the device isn't *causing* canc (Score:4, Informative)
2.4 GHz common misconception (Score:1)
That's a common misconception. The resonant frequency of water is not at 2.45 GHz (the freq of microwave ovens). There is an absorption peak around 22 GHz for liquid water. (See How a microwave oven works [zyra.org.uk] and the graph from Ask Mr. SETI [berkeley.edu].) Of course, the molecules of water interact more than those of a gas, so things are a bit more
microwaves don't really cause cancer (Score:2)
I've never even seen proof of high-intensity microwaves causing cancer, at least at intensities not high enough to cook someone. The frequency of the radiation is what matters most - cancer risk scales far more dramatically with frequency (exponential) than intensity (nearly linear).
Otherwise, a ton of microwave transmitter operator
Re:microwaves don't really cause cancer (Score:2)
Re:microwaves don't really cause cancer (Score:1)
Hey, no prob. Just seeing if you were a card-carrying member of the tin-foil hat club ;)
Re:Let's just hope the device isn't *causing* canc (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Let's just hope the device isn't *causing* canc (Score:4, Interesting)
This reminded me of something I heard years ago, in college. A guy from a cancer research organization (Stehlin) came by & talked to our class about cancer treatments. One of the investigative techniques focused on microwaves.
Apparently, it's more damaging to cancer than normal cells (has to do with plasma membrane composition). If exposed to low levels for a fairly long period of time (several minutes to an hour a day for several weeks), the tumor would dissolve and the local normal tissue would remain. The main problem they had at the time, he said, was that the cancer cells tended to lyse all at the same time, and the subject would go into lethal toxic shock, a prety bad way to go(this was working in mice.)
This was a while ago, 1990 or 91. I haven't heard anything from them about this stuff in a while, so it probably fell through.
..nothing...good or bad, but thinking makes it so. (Score:1)
Porp
Re:..nothing...good or bad, but thinking makes it (Score:1)
Pretty much everything involved in treating cancer is "bad for you."
Yeah, but this is just detection, not treatment.
93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:1)
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:3, Funny)
I'm getting close to the age [if not there, uggh] of getting THE PROBE during a yearly physical.
Dude, I'm looking forward to it. My wife had a diagnostic colonoscopy and to judge from her behavior afterwards, they gave her some good drugs!
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:2)
Ol' Doc RubberGloves (the "manual digital inspection" for your prostate) is, as another poster phrased it, Grin and Bear it.
Of course, you could always BYODrugs, I suppose. Personally, I'd hate to go into that physical while drunk. Pavlov teaches me that I'd associate the sensation of being drunk with the resulting
--
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:2)
the good drugs are only for the big scary sigmoid thing.
Naw, I had one of those already. It's quite uncomfortable, and they don't give you anything. A colonoscopy goes much farther into your nether regions, so they make you happy while they do it.
Despite the discomfort, it was cool to watch the video of the sigmoidoscopy. My lower colon in real time. Reality TV at its disgusting best.
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:1)
Chances are the ol' rubber glove is a lot more comfortable than having a hand-scanner rammed up there (which was my first mental image when I thought about scanners and cancer tests)
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:1)
Re: 93% of prostate cancer patients (Score:1)
And then a grin and bear it posture..
Re:What about those 7% (Score:1, Insightful)
Prostate Cancer sucks (Score:1)
Re:Prostate Cancer sucks (Score:1)
Watch for these in Insureance offices first (Score:2, Interesting)
Flatbeds? (Score:1, Offtopic)
"No, honestly sir, I was scanning myself for colon cancer - see this slashdot article? Umm, no I don't know anything about the emails with odd picture attachments my co-workers have been getting. It must be an unrelated incident."
Linking to the Press Release? (Score:2)
Raise an eyebrow (Score:1, Funny)
Person walks in with prostate problems. (Really doesn't have cancer)
Med scans prostate.
Device causes cancer, THEN detects it.
Person now has prostate cancer.
Get that thing away from my prostate!
Re:Raise an eyebrow (Score:2)
GATTACA (Score:1)
"'Age of onset of prostate cancer, 53 years.' When's your birthday?"
"Two weeks ago."
"Uh...hup...yeah, there it goes. Sorry, pal."
I didn't bother to RTFA (Score:2)
Biopsy still necessary in many cases (Score:4, Insightful)
Biopsied tissue is not subjected to a pass/fail test for cancer. Often the excised tissue is tested against different combinations of chemotherapy drugs to see which the tumor(s) will respond to best. In addition, a biopsy can help determine what specific type of cancer cells are present; knowing that a patient has lymphoma says very little about rate of growth, type of treatment indicated, etc. There are several types of lymphomas, both Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkins. Even knowing the difference between those two categories is helpful as non-Hodgkin's can be treated with monoclonal antibodies whereas Hodgkin's cannot.
This device, if it lives up to the hype, can still help.
First of all, we've had a lot of failed biopsies because they took tissue from areas that were benign and had to go back for more tissue in different areas. If the device could determine *where* the cancer is, it would make a biopsy more effective the first time around and prevent a lot of needless suffering and expense.
Secondly, many patients go through a staging surgery to determine the progression of the disease after the initial diagnosis. In lymphomas, the stages are ranked as I-IV, with an additional A or B tag. Simply knowing the cancer is both above and below the diaphragm in multiple sites will tell you that the patient is stage IV. The A/B tags represent whether there is organ involvement (B) or none (A).
Additionally, remission is often diagnosed through the results of CT and PET scans, which are not entirely conclusive but much less traumatic than surgery for additional biopsies, especially considering the effects of chemotherapy on the immune system and the healing ability of the body.
Hope this helps clear it up; anyone in the know please correct me if I'm wrong on any of this...
Re:Biopsy still necessary in many cases (Score:2)
Perhaps the most important part of the NewScientist article is at the bottom