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Transforming Medicine: Evidence-Driven mHealth
2015-09-30 - 2015-10-02    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
September 30-October 2, 2015Digital Medicine 2015 Save the Date (PDF, 1.23 MB) Download the Scripps CME app to your smart phone and/or tablet for the conference [...]
Health 2.0 9th Annual Fall Conference
2015-10-04 - 2015-10-07    
All Day
October 4th - 7th, 2015 Join us for our 9th Annual Fall Conference, October 4-7th. Set over 3 1/2 days, the 9th Annual Fall Conference will [...]
2nd International Conference on Health Informatics and Technology
2015-10-05    
All Day
OMICS Group is one of leading scientific event organizer, conducting more than 100 Scientific Conferences around the world. It has about 30,000 editorial board members, [...]
MGMA 2015 Annual Conference
2015-10-11 - 2015-10-14    
All Day
In the business of care delivery®, you have to be ready for everything. As a valued member of your organization, you’re the person that others [...]
5th International Conference on Wireless Mobile Communication and Healthcare
2015-10-14 - 2015-10-16    
All Day
5th International Conference on Wireless Mobile Communication and Healthcare - "Transforming healthcare through innovations in mobile and wireless technologies" The fifth edition of MobiHealth proposes [...]
International Health and Wealth Conference
2015-10-15 - 2015-10-17    
All Day
The International Health and Wealth Conference (IHW) is one of the world's foremost events connecting Health and Wealth: the industries of healthcare, wellness, tourism, real [...]
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MGMA 2015 Annual Conference
11 Oct 15
Nashville
Events on 2015-10-15
Latest News

Should we rename low risk cancers?

cancers

Should we rename low risk (“indolent”) cancers in a bid to reduce anxiety and harm from unnecessary investigation and treatment? Experts debate the issue in The BMJ today.

The clinical definition of cancer describes a disease that, if untreated, will grow relentlessly and spread to other organs, killing the host, explains Laura Esserman at the Carol Franc Buck Breast Care Center in San Francisco, California.

Yet what we routinely refer to as cancer today is a disease ranging from ultra low (less than a 5% chance of progression over two decades) to extremely high (more than a 75% chance of progression over one to two years).

Modern screening programmes have led to increased detection and treatment of ultra low risk cancers, including many thyroid, prostate, and breast cancers, she writes.

For example, as many as 35% of all screen detected breast cancers may fall into the ultra low risk category. Yet women with low risk lesions (known as ductal carcinoma in situ or DCIS) “are being rushed to the operating room, precipitating a lifetime of anxiety,” says Esserman.

Investigation and invasive intervention themselves carry risk. Rather than surgery, she believes we should offer active surveillance, but says “it is difficult to encourage patients to wait and watch once they have been told they have cancer.”

Overtreating people who are not at risk of death “does not improve the lives of those at highest risk,” she writes. “The refinement of the nomenclature for cancer is one of the most important steps we can take to improve the outcomes and quality of life of patients with cancer.”

But Dr Murali Varma at the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff warns that creating new entities risks confusion, so public education about the nature of cancer must be the priority.

In practice, it is impossible to determine the natural course of any low risk tumour, he says, “because excision for definitive diagnosis alters its natural course, precluding knowledge of how the tumour would have behaved if left untreated.”

This uncertainty could also lead to underestimation of the frequency of overdiagnosis as some “cured cancers” would not have progressed even if untreated, he adds.

Varma believes that, rather than focusing on semantics, the key is to educate everyone from the healthy public to health professionals about the meaning of a diagnosis of cancer.

New terminology often leads to confusion, so an alternative approach would be to recalibrate thresholds for the diagnosis of cancer, so that some very low risk cancers are categorised as benign, he suggests.

“If the public were educated that benign signifies very low risk rather than no risk at all, then anxiety inducing labels could be avoided,” he concludes.

In a linked patient commentary, Birte Twisselmann, an editor at The BMJ, describes the “considerable worry” of having two suspicious lesions dealt with in less than a year. Despite their low risk, she says the “confusing terminology for cancers and precancerous lesions made me anxious.”

Even the discharge letter “was another trigger for anxiety,” she adds. The phrasing is not a label like cancer, but “it felt as if it had a hidden meaning not intended for the patient to understand.”

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