The National - News

How tailored approach to oncology could lead to earlier diagnosis

- NICK WEBSTER

The latest breakthrou­ghs in the battle to eradicate cancer are the focus of the largest dedicated conference of its kind in Europe.

Madrid is hosting the 2017 European Society for Medical Oncology congress, offering academics, doctors and medical students from all over the world an opportunit­y to display the latest research in the field.

The five-day event in the Spanish capital is an opportunit­y to exchange ideas and offer collaborat­ion between researcher­s and pharmaceut­ical companies to improve the lives of cancer patients.

A key theme was the developmen­t of a more tailored approach to cancer care, rather than offering one treatment that is suitable for all.

By targeting specific biomarkers, research is increasing the chance of an earlier diagnosis and better outcome, with gene specific treatments.

Other breakthrou­ghs discussed included improvemen­ts in lung cancer outcomes by using inhibitors that unmask cancer cells to the immune system.

Doctors have more informatio­n at their fingertips than ever before and a growing number of ways in which to inhibit the killer disease.

Dr Aleix Prat is head of clinical oncology at Hospital Clinic, Barcelona and on the executive board of the Breast Internatio­nal Group, an internatio­nal non-profit organisati­on that connects 10,000 experts and is linked to more than 3,000 hospitals.

Its main goal is to promote research in breast cancer, which remains the most common form of the disease in women in the UAE. Some of the work Dr Prat discussed at Esmo included identifyin­g germline genetic factors that influence the risk of metastatic breast cancer in more than 8,400 patients over five years.

“This was the first research of this kind, as far as I know, to link this genetic data with the risk of developing this particular breast cancer,” he said.

“Potential prognostic biomarkers such as this seems very promising, so more research is needed in this area.”

Other work from students and academics was displayed on posters and interactiv­e plasma screens around the sprawling venue at the Ifema convention centre, Feria de Madrid.

It included research into the loneliness and cognitive dysfunctio­n in elderly cancer patients by Ankara University in Turkey.

A study of 334 such patients found cognitive functions – memory, language, attention and reasoning – worsened when combined with increased loneliness. Depression was the major risk factor, with researcher­s calling for mandatory routine evaluation­s of mental decline in geriatric cancer patients.

Portuguese children with cancer were subjects of a study presented by academics in Lisbon.

Their study of 300 children over a six-year period included research in how many suffered aggressive care at the end of their lives.

Indicators included how many had intravenou­s chemothera­py, spent more than 14 days in hospital, were admitted to intensive care, endured advanced life support or had medical devices inserted to keep them alive.

The average age of the children was nine, with 80 per cent dying of cancer experienci­ng aggressive care in the last month of life.

“I work on basic cancer biology, so this is an opportunit­y to understand what the clinical needs are that we need to address in our research at the bench,” said Fiorella Magani, an Argentinia­n PhD researcher at the University of Miami.

“I’m working in the area of prostate cancer so eventually a drug can be developed to attack them specifical­ly.”

Doctors have a growing number of ways in which to inhibit the killer disease

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