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July 14, 2006|Volume 34, Number 31|Seven-Week Issue


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Radiotherapy may benefit
some lung cancer patients

Patients with lung cancer live longer when radiation therapy follows surgery, but only if the disease is at an advanced stage, according to a study by School of Medicine researchers published June 13 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The analysis of 7,465 patients found that in patients whose lung cancer had spread to the regional lymph nodes between the lungs (mediastinal), overall survival at five years was 27% in patients receiving surgery plus radiation therapy compared to 20% in patients who were treated with surgery alone.

"This analysis of outcomes for a very large group of patients shows that postoperative radiotherapy for patients with positive mediastinal nodes may improve their overall survival, something which has not been clearly demonstrated in previous studies," says Dr. Lynn Wilson, associate professor, vice chair and clinical director of the Department of Therapeutic Radiology and senior author of the study.

The study analyzed data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Database (SEER), a national program that collects information on cancer cases from registries that represent 26% of the U.S. population. Wilson cautioned that although the findings are encouraging, clinical parameters including technical aspects of the surgery, other contributing illnesses, radiation techniques and radiation dose that may have an impact on the findings are not available from the SEER data.

Wilson notes that some previous studies suggested a detrimental effect on survival for patients receiving postoperative radiotherapy, particularly for patients with earlier stage cancers in which there was no lymph node involvement (N0), or in which cancer had spread only to the first echelon lymph nodes (N1).

"For those patients with involvement of mediastinal lymph nodes, the role of post operative radiotherapy has been controversial, and although data suggested local disease control benefits, overall survival improvements were not clear," Wilson says. "The current study confirms the findings regarding the detrimental effects of postoperative radiotherapy on survival for those with N0 or N1 disease, but reveals a significant improvement in survival for those with mediastinal lymph nodes, which is a notable finding."

-- By Jacqueline Weaver


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

SOM gets largest single donation in its 30-year history

Program to boost conservation in developing world

Study: Job loss near retirement doubles heart attack risk

Union, management working together . . .

Yale pledges full cooperation in federal review

School of Nursing to launch Ph.D. program

In honor of family's gift, facility has been renamed . . .

Students work to enrich Elm City on summer fellowship

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS


'To Know the Dark' exhibit features American artists' visions of the night

Study: Self-esteem a major factor in love-hate relationships

Pilot Pen Tennis tournament to debut instant replay technology

Library exhibit marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of . . .

Evidence of ultra-energetic particles found in jet from black hole

In YSN study, Iraqi nurses cite a need for new hospitals . . .

Northeast's mercury levels linked to power plant activity

SurExam in China to commercialize blood test for ovarian cancer

Oncolys BioPharma in Tokyo to develop novel anti-HIV treatment

Rudd Center's new blog encourages discussion of food-related issues

This New House

Vladimir Rokhlin honored by the IEEE for his invention

Olympian swimmer Mike Austin donates his gold medal to Yale

Acclaimed director Lloyd Richards, nurtured new playwrights

Yale chemistry student chosen by DOE to meet with Nobel laureates

Chinese archivists to meet with Yale librarians

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes


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