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Shining a
light on lighting up: 5 ways to spot and
stop Smoking-Related Cancers
Newswise — At 70 years old, Lydia Whitlow
likes to stay active. “I like to work in the
yard. It feels good to turn the soil and
watch my garden grow,” she says.
Enjoying a sun-filled day in south Houston
seemed nearly impossible a few years before,
given the circumstances.
Fifteen years ago, her dentist discovered
oral cancer during a routine exam. After
aggressive surgery, Whitlow, a smoker for
nearly 50 years, was relieved to find out
she was in remission.
In 2006, she received the grim news she
would be fighting cancer for a second round.
This time it would be one of the deadliest
forms of the disease.
An ache in her back led to the diagnosis of
“small cell” lung cancer, usually caused
from smoking. Small cell is aggressive.
Once diagnosed, most patients with
metastatic small cell cancer have a poor
survival rate.
Other physicians she consulted told her the
inoperable cancer in her lungs was resisting
traditional therapies. She was out of
options, they said.
Whitlow, however, isn’t “most patients,”
thanks to lifesaving research at the Center
for Thermal Therapy Cancer Treatment at The
University of Texas Medical School at
Houston. That’s where Joan Bull, MD,
professor of oncology, told Whitlow there
was hope.
For six months, Whitlow climbed into a
heavy-duty sleeping bag and warmed by heat
lamps. She was then warmed to 104 degrees
Fahrenheit, equivalent to a high fever.
Preliminary
research has shown that heat increases the
effectiveness of chemotherapy drugs in
fighting tumors.
The heat jumpstarts the immune system just
like a normal fever does when we are sick,
says Bull.
“Evidence shows that the combination of
chemotherapy, immune-modulating drugs and
thermal therapy helps weaken the cancer and,
in Whitlow’s case, kills it altogether.
"In
other cases, it can help reduce a tumor to
an operable size,” she explains.
Bull is now in Phase 2 of her clinical
trials. Her research on thermal therapy is
published in the Dec. 2008 issue of the
International Journal of Hyperthermia.
Whitlow received thermal therapy treatments
once a month. She was lightly sedated during
each six-hour treatment session and warmed
up by an infrared radiant heat device.
“I would be really tired at the end of those
sessions. You feel a little weak, but
otherwise OK,” she says.
Bull says Whitlow responded to the treatment
beautifully. She is now disease free.
Bull can treat patients with small-cell
lung, non-small-cell, neuroendocrine and
pancreatic cancers. She also works with
patients who have breast, endometrial and
cervical cancers.
Dentists, like Whitlow’s, serve an important
role in the fight against smoking-related
cancers.
Last
year, the American Dental Association (ADA)
launched a three-year nationwide public
service campaign to boost public awareness
of oral cancer and showcase a dentist’s role
in helping spot the disease early.
“We educate and train our students to become
skillful at obtaining a comprehensive
medical history, including family and social
history and risk-factor assessment from
their patients.
"We
stress the importance of asking the
questions, probing deeper into high risk
behaviors and actively listening for both
verbal and nonverbal cues.
"We
also train them on how to perform a thorough
head and neck examination on all their
patients to detect early signs and symptoms
of cancer,” says Catherine M. Flaitz, DDS,
oral and maxillofacial pathologist and dean
of the UT Dental Branch at Houston.
“The professors teach us how to identify
‘red flag’ conditions, not just in the
mouth, but in the entire head and neck
area,” says Nicholas Camarata, a third-year
student at the Dental Branch.
“It is important for us as students to learn
as much as we can about the clinical
presentations of oral cancer, so that we are
able to practice identifying what is a
variation of normal and what should be
looked at in greater detail.”
The warning signs include:
• white or red spots on the lips, gum
tissue, tongue, roof of the mouth or inside
the cheeks
• a sore that bleeds easily or does not heal
• pain, tenderness or numbness anywhere in
the mouth or on the lips
• difficulty chewing, swallowing, speaking
or moving the jaw or tongue
• a color change in the mouth
• and a change in “occlusion”--the way the
teeth fit together.
Flaitz adds that in today’s dental
practices, dentists may supplement a
clinical examination with new oral cancer
detection devices that enhance the
visualization of a suspicious lesion for
both the patient and the health care
provider.
Once a suspicious area has been identified,
a surgical biopsy is required to make a
diagnosis and determine the extent of the
disease.
Although general dentists may perform these
procedures, most patients are referred to
oral and maxillofacial surgeons for the
biopsy, if a cancer is the primary concern.
This tissue is then sent to either a general
pathology or oral and maxillofacial surgical
pathology laboratory for processing and
evaluation.
If you spot oral cancer in an early stage,
there is a near 95 percent survival rate.
Unfortunately, most oral cancers go
undetected until they become clinically
obvious and have spread.
Since early detection is key to saving lives
and facial disfigurement, research is
focused on identifying special biomarkers in
the lining of the mouth and in saliva that
signal a problem before a lesion is
apparent.
In addition, progress continues in
developing advanced light sources that can
detect oral cancer before the eye can see
it.
Flaitz adds that this is no longer a disease
of older individuals. The fastest growing
group is patients under 40 who don’t have
any classic symptoms or risk factors.
If you use tobacco, there’s one way to
lessen your chances of becoming a cancer
statistic: quit. But, no one says it’s easy.
For the more than 45 million Americans who
use tobacco¬, research shows nicotine can be
as addictive as cocaine.
Most smokers will make at least 11 attempts
before they successfully quit.
“Smoking is a very tough public health
issue. The key is prevention,” warns
Kathleen Reeve, DrPH, associate professor at
the UT School of Nursing and a published
author on this topic.
“We need to do a better job of reaching out
to adolescents.” A school curriculum program
called ASPIRE (A Smoking Prevention
Interactive Experience), jointly developed
by The UT School of Public Health and The
University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center, is helping get the word out to
teenagers.
“The program offers interactive activities,
videos, support strategies and fun
animations to help teenagers make their own
choices and stay on the path of good health.
It can even offer guidance to adolescents
who want to quit,” says Nancy Murray, PhD,
assistant professor of health promotion and
behavioral sciences at the School of Public
Health.
According to a study this year in the
journal of Nicotine and Tobacco Research,
ASPIRE was proven to be effective in smoking
prevention and cessation among teenagers.
Reeve also says that it helps to know that
your body is on your side. For instance:
Your body will begin to experience relief
just 20 minutes after you stop smoking:
• Twenty minutes after quitting: Your heart
rate and blood pressure drops.
• Twelve hours after quitting: The carbon
monoxide level in your blood drops to
normal.
• Two weeks to three months after quitting:
Your circulation improves and your lung
function increases.
• One to nine months after quitting:
Coughing and shortness of breath decrease;
cilia (tiny hair-like structures that move
mucus out of the lungs) regain normal
function, increasing the ability to handle
mucus, clean the lungs and reduce the risk
of infection.
• Five to 15 years after quitting: Your
stroke risk is reduced to that of a
nonsmoker.
• Ten years after quitting: The lung cancer
death rate is about half that of a
continuing smoker's. The risk of cancer of
the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder,
cervix, and pancreas decreases.
• Fifteen years after quitting: The risk of
coronary heart disease is that of a
nonsmoker's.
Professor Joy Schmitz, PhD, in the
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences at the medical school, is a leading
expert on smoking cessation. Schmitz says
pharmaceuticals are proven to be highly
effective.
“The nicotine gum and nicotine patch are two
types of replacement therapies. Other types
include the nicotine nasal spray, inhaler
and lozenge.
"They
all share the same pharmacologic rationale:
to aid cessation efforts by providing the
smoker with a safer, non-addictive delivery
of nicotine and thereby reduce nicotine
withdrawal symptoms,” says Schmitz.
Newer, FDA-approved, non-nicotine
medications include bupropion (Zyban) and
varenicline (Chantix).
Bupropion is the anti-depressant drug also
known as Wellbutrin.
It has been shown to reduce significantly
nicotine withdrawal symptoms, although how
it works is not fully understood, says
Schmitz.
Varenicline has been shown to reduce
cravings for cigarettes and also decrease
the pleasurable effects of smoking.
“All of these medication options have been
tested in randomized clinical trials and
have been shown to more than double the odds
of quitting when compared to a placebo,”
says Schmitz.
Smoking not only impacts the person choosing
to continue the habit, but also those around
them. Secondhand smoke is classified as a
“known human carcinogen” by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S.
National Toxicology Program and the
International Agency for Research on Cancer,
a branch of World Health Organization.
A 2006 U.S. Surgeon General’s Report showed:
• Secondhand smoke causes premature death
and disease in children and adults who do
not smoke.
• Babies exposed to secondhand smoke are at
an increased risk of sudden infant death
syndrome (SIDS), acute respiratory
infections, ear infections and more severe
asthma.
• Secondhand smoke immediately affects the
heart and blood circulation in a harmful
way.
• Exposure over a long time period can cause
heart disease and lung cancer.
A current study at the medical school is
researching how secondhand smoke impacts
some of the most vulnerable babies.
Researchers are recruiting parents who have
an infant in the neonatal intensive care
unit (NICU) at Children’s Memorial Hermann
Hospital who have at least one smoker in
their household, says Angela Stotts, PhD,
associate professor of family medicine at
the medical school.
“The study consists of motivational
interventions before the infant leaves the
NICU.
"We talk with the family and address
concerns the infant could experience from
secondhand smoke.
"We
also counsel them on what they can do to
reduce their child’s exposure to the smoke.
"One
novel aspect is that we are traveling to the
infant’s home at one, three and six months
after they go home to leave monitors which
measure nicotine levels,” explains
Stotts.
In a nationwide effort to help people kick
the habit, the American Cancer Society holds
its annual Great American Smoke Out during
November.
The goal of the campaign is to rally local
volunteers to help support smokers who want
to quit and press for laws that control
tobacco use.
Looking back, Whitlow counts her blessings.
“They told me I was one of the lucky ones. I
do feel lucky; others simply don’t make it.”
That’s why she is doing all she can to spare
others her hard-earned lessons.
“Whenever
I see young people smoking, I simply go up
to them and begin chatting. I tell them it
is bad, and then share my story. I regret
picking up my first cigarette when I was 18.
If I could go back, I would.”
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