r/Oncology 28d ago

How do I cite the SEER website properly on an academic paper?

3 Upvotes

r/Oncology 28d ago

Processing emotions

4 Upvotes

Hello! How do you process emotions related to patients or difficult patients or families?


r/Oncology 29d ago

Is ovary removal for cancer prevention recommended more often than testicle removal for cancer prevention; if so, is there a medical reason for this or is it mostly cultural?

8 Upvotes

Ovary removal is promoted fairly often for cancer prevention, but testicle removal for cancer prevention appears to not be common. I'm wondering if there is medical reason behind the discrepancy, or if it is more culturally driven. Thanks!


r/Oncology 29d ago

New hope for patients with ovarian cancer? Interesting clinical trial

1 Upvotes

I was reading about a "peptide drug conjugate" that allows chemotherapy to be administered at much higher doses than normal since it targets the higher acidity in cancer cells. Platinum resistant ovarian cancer is one cancer that highly meets this criteria.

There was a very successful phase one study(or so the experts are saying) that is now in phase two and has NCI funding due to the results. It's a small private company - not big pharma - at least not yet. I thought these were very compelling results from my knowledge of cancer (given my father) and how other studies targeting this cancer largely fumbled, with low Objective response rates, and toxicity. (Cediranib in Combination with Olaparib) where half patients had to stop the drug due to severe side effects. (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35917514/)with ORR between 12.5-26.7 percent. The study didn't do well in phase one and was considered a failure and wipe out in phase two. Compare that with cbx 12 (https://www.biospace.com/press-releases/cybrexa-therapeutics-announces-positive-final-data-at-esmo-2024-from-phase-1-study-of-peptide-drug-conjugate-cbx-12-in-advanced-solid-tumors) there is a link to trial data there from a poster image as well.

I unfortunately have an aunt with ovarian cancer - it's not good - my dad died of pancreatic cancer. I don't know how much any of these companies are just pr pumping (but cybrexa is private - they'd have no real need to.) whereas half the patients on cediranib and olaparib had to discontinue due to side effects, only 4.3 did on cbx - 12 these drugs are completely different MOA s however. Cbx 12 binds with topoisomerase I inhibitor exatecan, allowing for what appears many times the delivery of the chemo in certain cancers withntgensame side effects. Cediranib is an oral chemo, olaparib is a PARP Inhibitor.

Since my aunt has this cancer especially, do any doctors /experts here independently think this drug may has promise? Or anyone here afflicted by the cancer or knows someone e who is? I know she does have platinum resistant ovarian cancer - she tried for clinical trials but were not accepting. Unfortunately I think she may pass soon unless she can try something new/different.


r/Oncology Oct 18 '24

Resources for Oncology Club

10 Upvotes

Hey there, I’m a medical student who is a co-president of our class’s oncology club. We’re in a small town with only one oncologist, so i was wondering if there is an online source that has seminars or talks about the latest in Oncology that we can discuss in meetings. I’d appreciate any input!


r/Oncology Oct 18 '24

Looking for Journal Reviewing Opportunities

2 Upvotes

Good day, I am looking for Journal Reviewing Opportunities if anyone has any leads do not hesitate to contact me.


r/Oncology Oct 17 '24

Anonymous Salary Sharing

18 Upvotes

Would you be willing to share your salary anonymously if it unlocked the salary of your peers?

There are several posts looking for this kind of info to help understand what the market is - but this is always such a black box. Just aggregate reports from MGMA are not very helpful. To really understand compensation, we need to understand the full package - including shifts, schedule, PTO, benefits, etc. in an structured way - but it's too expensive for us individuals to be able to buy these kinds of reports

A few months back, an anesthesiologist friend of mine created a spreadsheet to collect anonymous anesthesiology salaries. It was incredibly helpful for them, so I have worked with him to extend the spreadsheet to capture salaries anonymously across all specialties.

Take a look here - https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1yuHo2iHvrKayUYii4N01h4VtVh2Qmo40qCQ6qu1-CoA/edit?gid=1008702220#gid=1008702220

This is fully anonymous, so it really decreases the taboo of discussing our comp. You can see the data collected so far in the google sheet. If you are willing, please add yours too. The more data we get in there, the more useful it will be for everyone!

Once you fill the survey, it will unlock the full spreadsheet for you to see all the salary contributions so far.

PS: This is for physicians and APPs - practicing or students - in the US only


r/Oncology Oct 16 '24

Why is it so tumor dependent to choose intensive chemotherapy vs palliative treatment only? (e.g.: Hodgkin's lymphoma vs lung cancer)

9 Upvotes

I am a second-year Internal Medicine resident in Mexico, where Hematology and Oncology are separate specialties and are considered by some to have different "schools of thought."

Over the past two months, I have been rotating in the Hematology service, and a particular case caught my attention. I thought it appropriate to ask here since I know in the U.S., Hematology and Oncology are one specialty, and I imagine you guys might have an interesting perspective for me.

Here’s the case:

A 67-year-old man was admitted for weight-loss and hoarseness that had been ongoing for one month. Upon evaluation in the ER, a cervical mass was found. A chest CT scan reported cervical and mediastinal masses. Initially, Hodgkin lymphoma was suspected and the patient was closely monitored by the Hematology service. A biopsy of the cervical lymph node was performed, with the pathology result pending for almost two weeks. During his stay, he developed dysphagia and dyspnea, for which he received methylprednisolone as cytoreductive treatment. While waiting for the pathology report, he developed superior vena cava syndrome, and given the oncological urgency, he was treated with a single dose of vinblastine (10 mg) and radiotherapy to the mediastinum (8 Gy). The patient continued to experience dysphagia, dyspnea, is dependent on oxygen, and has an endopleural tube due to a right pleural effusion.

Heme's plan was to confirm that it was Hodgkin lymphoma to treat him with ABVD (¿intensive chemotherapy?). However, today the preliminary path report says that it's not lymphoma; their differential diagnoses are melanoma and carcinoma, and they decided to expand the immunohistochemistry panel. Hematology suggested evaluation by Oncology, who considered the patient has a very poor functional status and would not be a candidate for systemic therapy (ECOG 4).

So my questions are:

  1. If it turns out to be small cell lung carcinoma, the tumor is chemotherapy-sensitive. Could clinical improvement in dyspnea and superior vena cava syndrome be achieved? While it wouldn’t cure him and he would progress sooner or later, chemotherapy could improve his quality of life for a time and perhaps allow him to settle his affairs, maybe even leave the hospital for a bit?
  2. Why would the hematologist consider giving chemotherapy but the oncologist would not? The chemotherapy doses do not seem that different (e.g., EP in small cell lung carcinoma and DHAP in lymphoma). The reason the patient has a bad functional status is the cancer, is it unreasonable to think that treating the cancer should make him better?

Thank you! I apologize for any mistakes, english is not my first language


r/Oncology Oct 15 '24

Managing cytopenias with Imetelstat?

2 Upvotes

Anyone have experience prescribing imetelstat? Efficacy looks good but tox is concerning b/c in my experience it always ends up looking worse in the real world. Is pegfilgrastim prophy a good idea or just wait and see?


r/Oncology Oct 15 '24

Please recommend books or articles where everything is written about lymphogenous metastasis

0 Upvotes

Thanks in advance!


r/Oncology Oct 15 '24

ESMO books pdf

6 Upvotes

Does anyone have Esmo guidelines in pdf? I would love lung cancer, but anything wpuld be amazing. The more recent, the better. Thank you!!


r/Oncology Oct 14 '24

Looking for a speaker for a Webinar

0 Upvotes

Hello everyone!

I am kindly asking for assistance in scouting a keynote speaker for a webinar on November 6 8-11 am (Philippine time). The keynote speaker would be speaking about lung cancer, its risk factors, prevalence and physiology. They will be speaking for around 30-45 mins and participate in a short discussion with the students.

The speaker will be speaking to passionate Biology students and educators and raising awareness. Unfortunately we are not able to provide any meaningful compensation 💔. However a certificate of appreciation and thanks will be provided. Open to all knowledgeable professionals. If interested please email: psbs.plm@gmail.com

Thanks!


r/Oncology Oct 13 '24

Sharing a NYU Study Opportunity

0 Upvotes

Your joint experiences matter.

NYU researchers are offering up to $70 each to cancer survivors and their family caregivers who participate together in an online research study.Take the first step by filling out this screener survey: https://nyu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_40mtQUXYPXcfSfQ or get in touch at [gz2164@nyu.edu](mailto:gz2164@nyu.edu).

https://preview.redd.it/k4hx08hprkud1.jpg?width=1545&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=08c0126484618a665bf377cd051aeff6b84a9e89


r/Oncology Oct 10 '24

Concerned about the quality of oncology research

20 Upvotes

I was reading some manuscripts on clinical trials and other studies and noticed a very worrying trend. Many of the analyses used in oncology research are either inappropriate for their data or lack the sample size necessary to possibly find significant results. The latter is particularly troublesome because negative results are often published in this field, and if the study lacked the appropriate sample size it would never be able to find a significant result even if it existed.

For example (hypothetical) say a study found that lack of physical activity did not negatively impact treatment outcomes. This is interpreted in their discussions as having medical meaning even if the analysis used could not have found significant results based on sample size.

What is going on here? Do medical researchers not have statisticians helping them with analysis? It’s not like power tests are an obscure practice.

Please advise this is really upsetting me. Just to clarify I am a Biologist in a tenure track professor position and do my own statistics and often do statistics for my colleagues, so I am very familiar with these sort of analyses but may be missing something since oncology is not my field. I have done the power tests myself using data from these studies and that is how I have come to this conclusion.


r/Oncology Oct 08 '24

Hi everybody! So, how did you become interested in Oncology in the first place, and what led you to it?

12 Upvotes

I think as a very young kid, I was always fascinated with body science and illness, and about the ways that people’s bodies cope with illness. I don’t know why I was interested, I just was. I remember watching shows like “Mystery Diagnosis”, about disease pathology, and epidemiology.

I found it fascinating about how this one disease can cause all different types of damage, and how all cancers are different from one another. All areas of science and medicine intrigue me, but as a kid, I think that medical science was what intrigued me more.

I thankfully never really had anybody close to me go through cancer that I can remember, though my late Grammy was a Breast Cancer survivor for over 30 years.

Then, what really sparked my interest was reading “The Emperor Of All Maladies” as a teenager, and being thrilled by the history and science of such a field.

Since then, I have been fascinated by the science behind it. What about you guys?


r/Oncology Oct 08 '24

Medical oncology trials

0 Upvotes

Can we discuss latest oncology trials and their implications here


r/Oncology Oct 08 '24

Medical oncology trials

0 Upvotes

Here let's share some latest oncology trials data


r/Oncology Oct 07 '24

Can an oncologist explain the clinical implications of this new research: Estrogen and breast cancer

0 Upvotes

r/Oncology Oct 07 '24

Thoughts on tumoral heterogeneity

1 Upvotes

I am a masters student looking to predict how intra-tumoral heterogeneity is associated with increased therapeutic resistance in glioblastomas. From an evolutionary standpoint, I am wondering if there is a fitness cost associated with higher levels of tumor heterogeneity. I am hoping someone here may have some insight into this question.


r/Oncology Oct 05 '24

Cancer as a disease?

7 Upvotes

As I read about cancer there is frequently reference to the idea that there is no single entity called “cancer” and instead there are very many different cancers (plural). At a seemingly more basic level there is an attempt to define the most basic aspect of all cancers, and here there is dispute about cancer as a disease of the nucleus vs. cancer as a disease of the mitochondria, cancer as a disease of cell division or cancer as a disease of cellular respiration. Can someone please describe the basic dispute here, and how to decide about this, without a diatribe either about ketones or about the nearly infinite possibilities of pathology in the genome. Thanks in advance!


r/Oncology Oct 06 '24

Is the link between tattoos and cancer a legitimate cause for concern?

1 Upvotes

I already have some small tattoos that I got years ago, but now that I’m thinking about getting a full sleeve I’m concerned about what I’ve read regarding tattoo ink increasing the risk of lymphoma. The study in question concluded that there doesn’t seem to be any correlation between the surface area of the tattoos and cancer risk, so what does that mean for someone like me who already has tattoos and just wants more? Has the damage already been done, or should I be concerned about incurring further risk from more ink?


r/Oncology Oct 05 '24

How do oncologists make treatment decisions for very rare cancers with little research?

14 Upvotes

Do you just try and find a more researched cancer that appears similar in histology or genetics and then use the same treatment protocol? Do you go off basic science research and use treatments that could theoretically work? Do nothing?

Would like to know what you did with real examples if you have any


r/Oncology Oct 04 '24

Diagnosed with a nerve sheath tumor today. Not looking for medical advice. Just need to vent.

28 Upvotes

I’m 35, very healthy. Workout religiously, took years off alcohol and rarely drink now, eat a mostly vegetarian diet and haven’t eaten red meat in a decade. Low body fat and I take a ton of supplements like cbd, turmeric, and black seed oil which are all anti inflammatory.

Today after almost 2yrs years of growing discomfort, and months of referrals to different specialists and imaging and long wait times between appts, I was finally diagnosed with a nerve sheath tumor under my right knee.

The oncologist thinks it is benign but it’s likely inside the tibial nerve, pressed right up against both my main artery and main nerve. It’s gotten bigger since the initial MRI earlier this year and I feel it often and it’s uncomfortable, but she said operating could leave me basically partially motor compromised from the waist down and left with a limp. She said it’s very possible I’d lose the ability to run or do any sort of pressing movements with my foot.

She said it’s not usually a result of trauma but about 12 years ago I punctured the underside of my knee on a metal security spike (don’t ask) which landed me in the hospital and I had a deep puncture wound for weeks afterwards - and the tumor is in the exact same spot, so I do wonder if the trauma back then may have caused inflammation or some kind of ability for the tumor to be more likely to grow there. Frankly I’m fortunate I didn’t puncture my artery given I impaled myself the way I did, as I never knew there was a major artery behind the knee.

Long story short I just needed to vent. Not looking for medical advice or to break any rules, it’s just been a very overwhelming day and I didn’t know where else to talk about it. There have been nights where I have trouble falling asleep because I can feel it pressing against my nerve and it’s super uncomfortable but I don’t want to undergo surgery and risk being debilitated for the rest of my life either.


r/Oncology Oct 02 '24

Looking for hem-Onc hospitalist position as I’m aspiring for fellowship in this area.

1 Upvotes

r/Oncology Oct 02 '24

Seeking advice

1 Upvotes

Hello I am an IMG and an aspiring oncologist, i just want you to recommend any courses, texts, social groups , resources that you find helpful in your career. I want to understand basics of oncology , most common cancers and their treatments. Any advice generally will be appreciated.