Clinical Trials for HER2 Mutant-Positive Tumors
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Clinical Trials for HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) Mutant-Positive Tumors are studies in which new treatments are being evaluated for their safety and efficacy for cancer patients. For new cancer therapies to be commercially used and known as a standard of care, they must be approved by the FDA after evaluation in different phases of clinical trials. These trials both help patients access new treatments and further clinical research with their participation. Read More The post Clinical Trials for HER2 Mutant-Positive Tumors appeared first on My Pancreatic Cancer ..read more
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COVID-19 and Cancer Patients: What You Should Know
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
The Facebook live event, COVID-19 and Cancer Patients: What You Should Know, was hosted by Massive Bio on January 13, 2021. The live event featured interviews about COVID-19 and its effect on cancer patients from Massive Bio medical experts. Guests included Massive Bio’s Co-founder and Chief Medical Advisor, Dr. Arturo Loaiza-Bonilla, MD; Chief Nursing Officer, Kristin Johnston, BSN, RN; and host Chief Customer Delivery Manager, Stephanie Tran. Massive Bio is tackling the inefficiencies of clinical trials during the COVID-19 pandemic for cancer patients and their physicians. Our AI-precision ..read more
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Pancreatic Cancer
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Fast Facts Hopeful Highlights Pancreatic Cancer Fast Facts In 2020, over 57,000 Americans will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in the United States and over 47,000 will die from the disease. Symptoms of pancreatic cancer include unintentional weight loss, abdominal discomfort, back pain, late development of type 2 diabetes, and even jaundice (yellowing of eyes and skin). Around 93% of pancreatic cancers are exocrine tumors, the most common being adenocarcinoma. Around 7% of pancreatic tumors are neuroendocrine tumors, known as islet cell tumors, which often grow slower than exocrine ..read more
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Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
The purpose of Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trials is to study new methods of treatment, detection, and prevention of pancreatic cancer to improve the standard care provided to these patients. All medicine that is currently used to treat cancer of any type once went through the phases of a clinical trial and was approved by the FDA. There are over 500 pancreatic cancer clinical trials available in the United States right now. Clinical trials can take years to be completed, so enrolling gives you early access to a treatment otherwise unavailable to the public. Read More The post Pancreatic Canc ..read more
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Stage 3 Pancreatic Cancer
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Pancreatic cancer is often diagnosed in the advanced stages (Stage 3 and Stage 4) because symptoms are rarely present in the early stages. Pancreatic cancer consists of 3% of all cancer cases in the United States and only 10% are early-stage cancer. For a patient’s pancreatic cancer to be classified as stage 3, the cancer must have spread from the pancreas to other areas of the body. Either the cancer has spread to four or more lymph nodes nearby, or metastasized to the nearby major blood vessels surrounding the pancreas, which include: Read More The post Stage 3 Pancreatic Cancer appeared f ..read more
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Pancreatic Cancer Symptoms
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Pancreatic Cancer Symptoms can occur before or after pancreatic cancer is diagnosed. Pancreatic cancer affects the tissues in the pancreas, the organ that releases enzymes to help digestion, and produces hormones that control the sugar in your blood. Pancreatic Cancer Symptoms can be noticed with nausea, loss of appetite, weight loss, slow developing jaundice, obstruction and pain in the stomach outlet. The most common type of pancreatic cancer, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), develops in the ducts that carry digestive enzymes from the pancreas to the body. Pancreatic cancer is usual ..read more
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Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer Survivors
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
An estimated 57,600 adults will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in the United States this year. It is also estimated that 47,050 deaths from pancreatic cancer will occur, according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology. The American Cancer Society reports that the 5-year survival rate for people with pancreatic cancer is 9%, while the 5-year rate for distant pancreatic cancer is just 3%. Although that may seem low, Stage 4 pancreatic cancer survivors do exist. Read More The post Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer Survivors appeared first on My Pancreatic Cancer ..read more
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Risk Factors for Pancreatic Cancer
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Pancreatic cancer begins in the tissues of your pancreas. It occurs when digestive enzymes become energetic inside the pancreas, attacking, and damaging its tissues. It can prevent you from properly absorbing nutrients from the meals you eat and producing hormones that help regulate blood sugar. There are risk factors for pancreatic cancer that can be controlled, and risk factors that cannot be. Risk factors for pancreatic cancer can be behaviors and characteristics, but they can also be genetic. It is important to try and avoid the risk factors that you can for pancreatic cancer, because mos ..read more
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What Is Pancreatic Cancer?
Massive Bio | My Pancreatic Cancer Blog
by Cancer Clinical Trial Specialist
3y ago
Pancreatic cancer begins when abnormal cells in the pancreas grow and divide out of control and form a tumor. The pancreas is a gland located deep in the abdomen, between the stomach and the spine. It makes enzymes that help digestion and hormones that control blood-sugar levels. According to the American Cancer Society, the five-year survival rate of pancreatic cancer is 9 percent. Pancreatic cancer is diagnosed in men more often than women. Risk factors for pancreatic cancer include smoking, diabetes, chronic inflammation of the pancreas, obesity, and older age. Most people diagnosed with pa ..read more
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