Fox Chase Cancer Center News

New Boost for Pancreatic Cancer Therapy

CHICAGO, IL (April 2, 2012) – Scientists at Fox Chase Cancer Center are developing a new way to treat pancreatic cancer by boosting the effects of gemcitabine (Gemzar)—the chemotherapy drug that is considered standard therapy for the disease. 

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The Protein Survivin Could be a Useful Biomarker for Pancreatic Cancer

CHICAGO, IL (April 1, 2012) —  New research from scientists at Fox Chase Cancer Center shows that a protein called survivin could be a useful tool in understanding pancreatic cancer—particularly for identifying which subsets of patients will most likely respond to treatment. The scientists found that patients who underwent different treatment regimens, following surgery, had different levels of survivin and experienced different lengths of disease-free survival.

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Fox Chase Scientists Identify Key Protein Players in Hard-to-Treat Breast Cancers

CHICAGO, IL (April 1, 2012)—At the time of diagnosis, the majority of breast cancers are categorized as estrogen-receptor positive, or hormone sensitive, which means their cancerous cells may need estrogen to grow. Patients with this type of cancer often respond favorably to treatments called aromatase inhibitors, like tamoxifen, which cause cell death by preventing estrogen from reaching the cancerous cells. Over time, however, the disease often becomes resistant to estrogen deprivation from the drugs—making treatment options more limited. New findings by researchers from Fox Chase Cancer Center identify a pair of proteins that could play a crucial role in restoring treatment sensitivity to these resistant cancerous cells—possibly leading to more treatment options in the future.

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Fox Chase Cancer Center Leads Efforts to Establish National Standards for Survivorship Care

​HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (March 18, 2012) — People are living longer with and after a cancer diagnosis, making survivorship clinics and programs—as well as official guidelines and practices governing the care of survivors—an important emerging component of modern cancer care. Many institutions are looking to gather these resources into an easily understandable plan for their survivors. Crystal S. Denlinger, MD, Assistant Professor, Gastrointestinal Oncology, a medical oncologist at Fox Chase Cancer Center who will present on best practices in cancer survivorship at the NCCN 17th Annual Conference: Clinical Practice Guidelines & Quality Cancer Care™ on March 18, 2012.

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