HemOnc Today Current Issue
The following articles appeared in the print edition of HemOnc Today.
Table of Contents
- Nutrition and cancer: No magic bullet, but an important aspect of treatment, prevention
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- ARISTOTLE: Apixaban bests warfarin for stroke prevention in AF
- Depression associated with stroke morbidity and mortality risk
- Diabetes therapy, cancer connection scrutinized
- Disparities considered in cervical cancer screening
- Meta-analysis: Smoking duration, intensity increased risk for Hodgkin’s lymphoma
- NSAIDs associated with reduced breast cancer incidence in black women
- Physician disease-specific expertise may influence outcome in CLL
- Potential reason for improved outcome found with GWTG-Stroke program
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- Racial disparity in use of minimally invasive radical prostatectomy decreased by half since 2001
- Taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy not related to OS, DFS or RFS
- TNF inhibitors associated with skin cancers, not lymphoma
- Women with BRCA mutation more likely to develop breast cancer while young
- 65-year-old woman with sarcoidosis, suspicion of inflammatory breast carcinoma Munir Ghesani, MD, FACNM; Sharon Rosenbaum-Smith, MD; Amit Patel, MD; Karen Ching, MD
- Babesiosis should be considered more frequently when diagnosing certain fevers
- Diarrhea after cord blood HSCT may be attributable to cord colitis syndrome
- Forgoing hormone therapy did not increase mortality for some older patients with breast cancer
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- Interest in academic career waning among hem/onc fellows
- Knowledge of imminent death did not increase pain, anxiety
- Models helped predict erectile dysfunction after prostate cancer
- Sarcopenia associated with DFS, distant DFS in melanoma
- Breast cancer survivors show interest in survivorship clinics
- Invasive mold infections occurred with absence of prophylaxis covering
- New tool may help predict breast-cancer-associated lymphedema
- Patient outcomes affected by chemotherapy-associated bowel syndrome, neutropenia
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- Previous antibiotic use, length of stay influence cefepime resistance in febrile neutropenic patients
- Younger, premenopausal women with LCIS more likely to choose BPM
- Treating cancer pain: Barriers and fears to overcome Stephanie M. Harman, MD, FACP