Genetic Marker For Aggressive Prostate Cancer 36
hairygenes writes "Northwestern University researchers have found a genetic marker associated with aggressive forms of prostate cancer. Previously characterized mutations in markers at 8q24 are associated with a broader population than previously reported and with much more aggressive tumors. deCODE genetics, who originally characterized these mutations, noted a 60% increase in risk of prostate cancer, but this study finds more concrete linkage to inheritance and disease severity."
spreading the truth (Score:4, Funny)
You see, that's interesting, because I had always assumed it had some relation to markers at g04t53.
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You are thinking of the marker responsible for the onset of sudden eye distress, which often causes the gene at location 09f9 to switch on and offer some relief.
Info's only good if you can do something about it (Score:2)
I'm sick and tired of the medical "profession". It has a lot in common with the oldest profession.
Re:Info's only good if you can do something about (Score:2)
Hey, what a coincidence! I'm sick and tired of people who lump nurses and doctors into the same broad category with their retarded insurance providers! They have a lot in common with people who lump everyone with a last name of "Yousef" into the same broad category with "terroristic bad-guy evildoers".
But, hey, next time you visit the ER with a life-threatening emergency, be sure to wear your T-shirt with
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Child!
That's dumb (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The doctors and nurses are the ones who treat you. None of them would refuse to treat you because of a pre-existing condition, or because your being dumb is what got you there in the first place. I've yet to hear about anyone working in the ER turning away a stroke patient because it was some pre-existing condition, or someone with a cracked skull because, hey, they shouldn't have climbed on the house in the first place.
2. Then there are the guys who have
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Well, here's what I do know (Score:2)
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Your inability to realise that both doctors and medical insurers are part of the same system bemuses me. I haven't even written enough for you to assess what I do and don't know about the industry. (Hell we haven't even narrowed it down to a country to argue about)
Your inability to make an argument without hurling insults amuses me. (Heck your inability to make an argument without using underscores around key words for emphasis is funny enough)
Your supposition that anything
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Heh. So you ARE a lemming? (Score:2)
Heh. If the previous use of "lemming" was just a mild euphemism, the above tantrum above moderation earns the "lemming" title fair and square, beyond all reasonable doubt.
Why _do_ you care that much about moderation? It just says that one other person thought the same. Big
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Idiot (Score:2)
Here, lemme spare your little monkey brain the effort: I _don't_ support the kind of insurance you have to live with. I _do_ think that doctors have nothing to do with that insurance system.
Also, if I were to get diagnosed with just about anything, I _can_ get medical care, because I live in one of those countries where everyone pays for everyone else.
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2. How is someone responsible for a disability they're born with or for an accident or illness that befalls them through no fault of their own? Your refusal to accept that people don't have complete control for things that happen to them is just funny.
3. Stop fucking quoting scientists at me. I actually happen to have a Masters in Astronomy and did a history subject for half
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If you're going to make a claim like "the feminist movement has research on men's health buried" please post the subsequent proof. I'm not going to take that statement on face val
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Let me also state, that there is a wiki entry here [wikipedia.org] which states the following: "However, some studies, such as those done by the Independent Women's Forum, conclude that when taking into
It will be a great advance (Score:4, Informative)
The problem is the side effects of current treatments. They are fairly dire, including impotence and incontinence as very common (and probably underreported) side effects of surgery. Because most PCs are not aggressive, the main consequence of intensive screening programs is that we detect more non-aggressive cases, we then needlessly operate, and we thus needlessly produce unpleasant side effects in thousands of men who would have died with, but not of, non-aggressive PC. But, there was no way to know.
So if you could have some way of only treating those we really need to treat, it would have major quality of life implications for a lot of men.
The other question is, what the right treatment is. This is very personal and depends on risks and attitudes to it. It seems from a review of the literature by an amateur, that the treatment which offers the best risk reward ratio is Intermitten Hormone suppression. It is going to be unpleasant, but its temporary. Its not guaranteed to work - but neither is surgery, the recurrence rate is not trivial.
Biopsy is also not either totally reliable or particularly safe in itself. You can miss the tumour, if its small, if there is one. It is also possible that when biopsy is done under general anesthetic, the anesthetic itself can produce total urinary blockage in a man with benign enlargement.
All in all this is a very messy illness and its great that some real progress in diagnosis is being made.
Two Words. (Score:1)
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Here are my two words:
Different condition
As in "Saw Palmetto is used to treat prostate enlargement not prostate cancer ". They aren't the same.
Can We Get F Few Things Straight Here? (Score:4, Informative)
How is it useful? (Score:2)
The principle utility of this discovery -- if it leads to a test -- is that it will help in screening patients who need immediate treatment for their prostate cancer from those where it is reasonable to wait and see how fast the cancer progresses. That's important because a large number of elderly men have prostate cancer (50% is a common estimate) and there aren't close to enough resources to treat them all. Nor, probably, is there any need to do so.
I went to a prostate cancer research conference, and over lunch, I asked one of the investigators, "You're working on this gene that only affects 5% of men with prostate cancer. What good is that? How does that help the other 95%?"
He said, when we find that gene that causes prostate cancer in 5% of the men, we can go back and find the protein that the gene produces, and find all the other proteins that it interacts with. It often turns out that the other 95% of cancers involve defects in the other proteins
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Wrong. After some period of time it becomes hormone refractory. That is, it accommodates to the absence of androgen and resumes its growt
Gattaca anyone? (Score:1)
Finally! (Score:1)