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Advances Highlight Progress Being Made In The Treatment And Research Of GastroIntestinal Disorders
Clinicians, researchers and scientists from around the world will gather for Digestive Disease Week® 2009 (DDW®), the largest and most prestigious gastroenterology meeting, from May 30 to June 4, 2009, at the McCormick Place Convention Center, Chicago, IL. DDW is the annual meeting of the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) Institute, the largest and oldest GI society in the world. AGA Institute researchers will present exciting, cutting-edge data during the meeting that will help change the way physicians diagnose and treat GI disorders.
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Nebraska Legislature Advances Ultrasound Viewing Bill
The Nebraska Legislature on Wednesday voted to advance a bill (L.B. 675) that would require abortion providers who perform ultrasounds on women seeking the procedure to tell women that a view of the fetus will be available and display the screen in a way that the image can be easily seen, the AP/Lincoln Journal Star reports. The bill also would require the state to compile a list of clinics that offer no-cost ultrasound services. State Sen. Brenda Council (D) criticized that particular provision, saying it would force the state Department of Health and Human Services to spend more taxpayer money.Lawmakers advanced the bill by voice vote after approving an amendment to clarify language surrounding the qualifications of health professionals performing ultrasounds. Advocates for the bill claim it would provide more information to women seeking abortion procedures, while opponents of the bill argue that it would allow the government to interfere in a private procedure. The bill faces a final vote before going to Gov. Dave Heineman (R). If the bill becomes law, Nebraska would join more than a dozen states that have similar laws, the AP/Journal Star reports (Ortiz, AP/Lincoln Journal Star, 5/27).
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ZymoGenetics Reports Encouraging Phase 2 Results In Renal Cell Cancer For IL-21 With Nexavar(R)
ZymoGenetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:ZGEN) announced positive final results from a Phase 2 clinical trial in patients receiving 2nd or 3rd line therapy for advanced renal cell carcinoma with the combination of recombinant Interleukin 21 (IL-21) and Nexavar® (sorafenib) tablets. The combination demonstrated considerable clinical benefit, with an overall response rate (as assessed by an independent review) of 21%, a disease control rate of 82%, and progression-free survival (PFS) of 5.7 months in this heavily pretreated population. Results were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting.
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Smear Tests For Under 25s Have Little Impact On Cancer Rates

Cervical screening in women aged 20-24 has little or no impact on rates of invasive cervical cancer up to age 30, concludes a study published on bmj.com. A second study shows that the risk of developing pre-cancerous lesions on the surface of the cervix (known as cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or CIN) is much higher in women with persistent human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, especially the high-risk HPV types 16 and 18. Together, these findings highlight the challenges faced by policy makers in balancing the benefits and harms of screening women at different ages and at different levels of risk. In 2003, cervical screening in England was moved to start at age 25 as it was felt it did more harm than good in younger women. But recent public controversy has led the government to review whether women aged 20-24 should be offered smear tests, as they are in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. So researchers at Queen Mary, University of London set out to study the impact of screening on risk of cervical cancer at different ages. They identified 4,012 women aged 20-69 diagnosed with cervical cancer between 1990 and 2008 and a matched group of 7,889 healthy controls of the same age and living in the same area. They found no evidence that screening women aged 22-24 reduced the incidence of cervical cancer over the next five years (at ages 25-29). Screening was associated with a 60% reduction of cancers in women aged 40, increasing to 80% at age 64. Screening was particularly effective in preventing advanced stage cancers. However, in younger women, the effect of screening was substantially and significantly less. For example, screening between the ages of 30 and 37 was associated with a reduction in the risk of cervical cancer over the next five years of between 43 and 60%, while screening at ages 20-24 had no detectable impact on cervical cancer rates under the age of 30. In fact, a careful review of the screening histories of women aged 20-24 with a diagnosis of cancer suggests that few, if any, of the cancers occurred through a lack of screening, say the authors. Indeed, only five of 73 women had not been screened in the previous six years. Finally, they point out that the risk of cancer under age 25 in women vaccinated against HPV will be low enough to make screening at such an age unjustifiable. Policy decisions should be based on balancing the benefits and harms of screening and the need to take into account the underlying risk of cervical cancer at different ages, write the authors. "We have provided more accurate estimates of the benefits of cervical screening in different age groups, which should aid policy makers in making their decisions," they conclude. In an accompanying editorial, three cancer specialists suggest that in many developed countries the low incidence of invasive cervical cancer and the lack of effectiveness of screening in young women indicate that screening should not start before the age of 25. At younger ages, the main challenge is to find the progressive lesions and to avoid treating the remaining lesions, given that treatment may be harmful to future reproductive health, they conclude. Links Research: "Effectiveness of cervical screening with age: population based case-control study of prospectively recorded data" Research: "Short term persistence of human papillomavirus and risk of cervical precancer and cancer: population based cohort study" Editorial: "Cervical screening according to age and HPV status" British Medical Journal


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