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Cancer Commentary, Cancer Treatments, Cancer News, Cancer Stories, Cancer Research.

Increased Chemotherapy Dose, Not Beneficial to Osteosarcoma Patients

by Gloria Gamat on January 27th, 2007

Cancer Guided Imagery Program for Cancer ChemotherapyCompared to standard doses of chemotherapy, a dose-intensive regimen of cisplatin and doxorubicin offered no clinical benefit in patients with the bone cancer osteosarcoma.

Such were the findings of a randomized clinical trial whose data has been reported in the January 17 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

In other cancers such as non-Hodgkin lymphoma and breast cancer, increasing the intensity of a chemotherapy regimen (means decreasing the number of days between chemotherapy treatments) may improve survival, as been shown in previous studies.

But that wasn’t the case in osteosarcoma: while the dose-intensive regimen killed tumor cells better than the standard regimen after surgery, survival rates were similar in both groups.

Read more details from the full report or read a copy of the article.

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POSTED IN: on anti-cancer ingredients, on bone cancer, on cancer diagnostics

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