Archive for 2006

Benchmarks articles from the selected year appear below. To view articles from previous years, use the links to the left, and select the year you wish to see.

Second Cancers Complicate Long-Term Survival

A cropped image of a bar graph showing increasing numbers of cancer survivors in the U.S.

The long-awaited day has arrived: you have finished chemotherapy and radiation treatments, and your cancer is in remission. For millions of patients with cancer each year, ths day has become a reality. The number of cancer survivors has been increasing every year for decades.

Although the acute side effects of cancer therapy — nausea, anemia and hair loss — are well known, possible late or chronic complications resulting from cancer are not clearly defined. As cancer survivors live longer, the effects of cancer treatments and additional health risks become apparent. The most serious side effect is development of a second cancer.

Turning Molecules into Medicine; The Role of the National Cancer Institute’s Developmental Therapeutics Program in Drug Development

Diagram of arteriole and cells

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is committed to the discovery and development of new and effective therapies for cancer. As a result, about half of the drugs used to treat cancer today are due to NCI’s efforts. The Developmental Therapeutics Program (DTP), within the Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis (DCTD) is the drug development arm of NCI. Working with academic scientists, clinicians and commercial companies, DTP has contributed to the rapid development of drugs and therapies to improve cancer treatment.

Translational Science: Bridging the Gap

Diagram of arteriole and cells

Scientific discoveries typically begin at the bench, with basic research through the study of diseases at a molecular or cellular level, then progress to the clinical level, or the patient’s bedside. Scientists are increasingly aware that this bench-to-bedside approach to translational research is actually a two-way street. Basic scientists provide clinicians with new tools for use in patients and for assessment of their impact, while clinical researchers make novel observations about the nature and progression of disease and gather biospecimens that are necessary to fuel the next generation of basic investigations.